ISPD peritonitis guideline recommendations: 2022 update on prevention and treatment

Philip Kam‐Tao Li(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Kai Ming Chow(Chinese University of Hong Kong), Yeoungjee Cho(The University of Queensland), Stanley Fan(William Harvey Research Institute), Ana Elizabeth Figueiredo(Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul), Tess Harris(Kidney Care UK), Talerngsak Kanjanabuch(Chulalongkorn University), Yong-Lim Kim(Kyungpook National University), Magdalena Madero(National Heart Institute), Jolanta Małyszko(Medical University of Warsaw), Rajnish Mehrotra(University of Washington), Ikechi G. Okpechi(University of Cape Town), Jeff Perl(St. Michael's Hospital), Beth Piraino(University of Pittsburgh), Naomi Runnegar(The University of Queensland), Isaac Teitelbaum(University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus), Jennifer Ka-Wah Wong(Prince of Wales Hospital), Xueqing Yu(Guangdong Academy of Medical Sciences), David W. Johnson(The University of Queensland)
Peritoneal Dialysis International
March 1, 2022
Cited by 638

Abstract

Peritoneal dialysis (PD)-associated peritonitis is a serious complication of PD and prevention and treatment of such is important in reducing patient morbidity and mortality. The ISPD 2022 updated recommendations have revised and clarified definitions for refractory peritonitis, relapsing peritonitis, peritonitis-associated catheter removal, PD-associated haemodialysis transfer, peritonitis-associated death and peritonitis-associated hospitalisation. New peritonitis categories and outcomes including pre-PD peritonitis, enteric peritonitis, catheter-related peritonitis and medical cure are defined. The new targets recommended for overall peritonitis rate should be no more than 0.40 episodes per year at risk and the percentage of patients free of peritonitis per unit time should be targeted at >80% per year. Revised recommendations regarding management of contamination of PD systems, antibiotic prophylaxis for invasive procedures and PD training and reassessment are included. New recommendations regarding management of modifiable peritonitis risk factors like domestic pets, hypokalaemia and histamine-2 receptor antagonists are highlighted. Updated recommendations regarding empirical antibiotic selection and dosage of antibiotics and also treatment of peritonitis due to specific microorganisms are made with new recommendation regarding adjunctive oral N-acetylcysteine therapy for mitigating aminoglycoside ototoxicity. Areas for future research in prevention and treatment of PD-related peritonitis are suggested.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis