Well the power of Kjellstrand's paper is that he compared age matched groups and undercut the long time contention that there is a selection bias among those who thrive on daily dialysis because they are not selected as severely as those who are candidates for a transplant.I'm not sure what to make of your question about the cause of death. What are you thinking could be happening? If someone with a transplant dies of cancer there is no way to know if they would have had cancer without a regime of immune suppression, just as it is impossible to know if someone on dialysis would have died of a heart attack if they had had a transplant.
Those who think that my comments about the negative data regarding quality of life on dialysis are just "my own projections from a data base of one" might want to consider the following:5% of all dialysis patients commit suicide. Depending on the country, from 7 to 20% of all dialysis patients eventually choose to withdraw from dialysis, knowing that this will cause their death. There are extremely high rates of clinical depression among dialysis patients, estimated as high as 20% by some. These data are extracted from: Jeremy Levy, et al, "The Oxford Handbook of Dialysis" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), pp. 64-65, 530, 534, and Richard Munson, "Raising the Dead: Organ Transplants, Ethics, and Society" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002) pp. 113-114. As Professor Levy, whom I know personally, and who has had decades of experience with thousands of dialysis patients concludes: "It is not uncommon for patients or family to feel that the quality of life on dialysis is so poor that they would rather die."
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 10, 2008, 04:17:07 PMWell the power of Kjellstrand's paper is that he compared age matched groups and undercut the long time contention that there is a selection bias among those who thrive on daily dialysis because they are not selected as severely as those who are candidates for a transplant.I'm not sure what to make of your question about the cause of death. What are you thinking could be happening? If someone with a transplant dies of cancer there is no way to know if they would have had cancer without a regime of immune suppression, just as it is impossible to know if someone on dialysis would have died of a heart attack if they had had a transplant.Well it is in regard to comparing mortality rates.Mortality rates might be similar but taking the two groups it is well known that most dialysis patients die because of dialysis related factors. While those with a tx may not actually be dying because of a direct link to the tx or medication.In other words did the paper exclude those tx patients who died from causes that were not related to the transplant?
I repeat. No one is wrong here. We are all different in our approaches and in how we handle things. Suicide is an option and may be the best for some.
Why wouldn't non-ESRD related deaths be similar between the two groups?
Quote from: Bill Peckham on May 11, 2008, 01:22:41 PMWhy wouldn't non-ESRD related deaths be similar between the two groups? Well first off tx patients as a whole travel and do far more stuff than those bound to a machine daily. Thus exposure to far more factors in their life.They merely compared their rates to the total USRDS 2005 Data Report and that was it.Without separation as to death the mortality rate comparison means little as its not giving an accurate picture.
Most of the patients in my center who have died lately did so because of other medical problems and not as a direct result of dialysis. We have had no suicides in my brief tenure there. Unfortunately many of these statistics don't take into consideration such factors as other medical problems, mental state, socio-economic factors, and quality of care.
As Professor Levy, whom I know personally, and who has had decades of experience with thousands of dialysis patients concludes: "It is not uncommon for patients or family to feel that the quality of life on dialysis is so poor that they would rather die."
Hmmm I don't think exposure to life is a mortality risk. The data seems solid to me but if what you're thinking is true - getting a transplant increases the risk of death through sky diving or something then you'd still have to say death is death and you're as likely to die after cadaveric transplant as you would be if you were dialyzing more frequently. It would be hard for me to travel more than I do - 5 trips in the last 5 weeks. I'm at Midway in Chicago right now about to board. If the plane crashes then I guess that will count against daily dialysis.
I would trust an opinion of a world-recognized expert over that of anyone on this message board.
These data are extracted from: Jeremy Levy, et al, "The Oxford Handbook of Dialysis" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001), pp. 64-65, 530, 534, and Richard Munson, "Raising the Dead: Organ Transplants, Ethics, and Society" (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002) pp. 113-114.
Bill: I don't understand the statement that 'withdrawal from dialysis is not suicide.' Of course it is! If you voluntarily choose to do something (unhook yourself from a life-sustaining machine, withdraw from a life-sustaining therapy) which you know will result in your death, then you are committing suicide. Similarly, if you deliberately abstain from taking whatever it is you need to live, such as food, water, air, or in some cases, dialysis, then you are also choosing your own death and any coroner would rule it as such, so again, it is suicide.Another negative factor to keep in mind with respect dialysis is that dialysis causes a release of toxic cytokines into the body, causing a generalized inflammatory response, which further leads to morbidity and mortality. With more frequent dialysis, there will be more frequent dumping of cytokines into the blood stream, so the negative effects will increase.