I only spent 6 months on hemo before switching to PD so I have limited experience. I was doing 3.5 hrs 3 days a week. I'm very short and didn't weigh much after being seriously ill. Doing 17 hours a week at home may be bearable. I think doing 17 hrs a week in center I may have lost my mind. I don't like spending that much time with people I don't know without privacy or comfort. It makes me cringe thinking about it. I don't know if it was enough dialysis for me or not. I had a little kidney function left from my failed transplant. My numbers were good. I had a lot of other medical problems so it's hard to know if when I felt bad it was a lack of dialysis or other stuff. That is my subjective experience.On the other hand, as a scientist, I think you are probably right. Longer dialysis can really make a difference in quality of life. It's a shame we can't provide that to more people. Someone could probably spend years studying which molecules are cleared better with longer dialysis. But does that detail matter to the patient? Not if they feel better. I do wonder how many patients would be willing to spend more time in center. (Regardless of the population here on this board, there are many patients unable to do home hemo.)
As much of a fan of Dr. Agar as I am, they are not "his" theories. Dr. Scribner and his colleagues including Dr. Chris Blagg and Dr. Carl Kjellstrand dialyzed their patients in the 1960's up to 24 hours per week with thrice weekly 6-8 hour nocturnal at home sessions. Ultra-short dialysis came into being after the 1973 ESRD program.Carl Kjellstrand published his "Un-physiology" theory of dialysis in I believe 1974, but I would have to look it up again to clarify the exact date. His theory has been castigated and ignored by American dialysis and American nephrology ever since because its application would have reduced their profits. Nocturnal daily hemodialysis started in Canada in the 1990's as a strategy for patients who did not tolerate UF. The 10 ml/min/kg comes from another researcher.Japan has used these strategies even in their in-center patients for decades. Tassin France has used the old Scribner thrice weekly 6-8 hour treatments without stop since learning of them in Seattle during the 1960's.So, once again, Dr. Agar is a wonderful researcher in his own right, but longer, more frequent, gentler dialysis preceded Dr. Agar, but he did learn as the Americans did not. Dr. Agar has had the personal mission over the last decade or more to educate American nephrology, but to date, America is more concerned about greed than patient outcomes.The NxStage is very low on dialysate volume and operates on the solute kinetics curve in the early phase before it plateaus which means it never reaches the most efficient use of TIME because the dialysis volume is so low. All other systems operate in the plateau of that curve thus giving NxStage it's Achille's Heal, volume. With 60 liter treatments, it operates at the beginning of the plateau of the solute curve but I cannot tolerate that kind of sodium load. NxStage still has not arrived as an optimal machine. If they adjust their sodium to the 135-136 mmol range, then combined with their ultra-pure dialysate, NxStage at that point will be quite competitive even with new machines that will soon come to the market place.