1 / 25

WAA registry data of LDL-apheresis and concepts of how to enable a comparison with a control group

WAA registry data of LDL-apheresis and concepts of how to enable a comparison with a control group. Dr. med. Heinrich Prophet Dialysegemeinschaft Nord, Apheresezentrum Rostock, Deutschland. WAA Registry. Why ? Visualize apheresis activity and bundle efforts in this field.

rusti
Download Presentation

WAA registry data of LDL-apheresis and concepts of how to enable a comparison with a control group

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WAA registry data of LDL-apheresis and concepts of how to enable a comparison with a control group Dr. med. Heinrich Prophet Dialysegemeinschaft Nord, Apheresezentrum Rostock, Deutschland

  2. WAA Registry • Why ? • Visualize apheresis activity and bundle efforts in this field. • Recognize indications, techniques, side effects and outcomes. • Compare those modalities nationally and internationally. • Follow apheresis trends over time. • Improve safety and quality of therapy.

  3. WAA Registry • Features: • Specific coding of center and patient • No expenses for the collaborating center • Non-competitive evaluation • Single or multi center studies are feasable

  4. WAA Registry • Participants (march 08): • 75 centers applied for a login code • 15 centers in 7 countries enter actively • 2013 patients with 12448 procedures have been submitted

  5. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Participants (august 2008): • 6 centers in 4 countries (Sweden, Lithuania, Czech Republic, Germany) have entered LDL-apheresis procedures • 53 patients with 2740 procedures have been submitted

  6. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Participants (august 2008):

  7. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Participants (august 2008):

  8. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Patients characteristics (august 2008) : • mean age: 50,2 years (10-76) • gender distribution: 31 men : 22 women (58,5:41,5 %)

  9. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Patients characteristics (august 2008) : • Diseases leading to LDL-apheresis

  10. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Patients characteristics (august 2008) : • Blood access for chronic LDL-apheresis:

  11. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Treatment characteristics (august 2008) : • Devices used for direct adsorption/primary separation

  12. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Treatment characteristics (august 2008) : • Devices used for plasma treatment

  13. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Treatment characteristics (august 2008) : • Anticoagulation

  14. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Outcomes (august 2008) : • VAS of functional ability • In only 803 of 2696 therapies submitted (29,8 %)

  15. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Outcomes (august 2008) : • VAS of quality of life • In only 248 of 2696 therapies submitted (9,2 %)

  16. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Outcomes (Center Rostock, august 2008) : • All cardiovascular events (MI, PCI, coronary or peripheral bypass) in 29 LDL-apheresis patients of the Rostock Apheresis Center before and after start of apheresis *p<0,001 *

  17. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Outcomes (Center Rostock, august 2008) : • All cardiovascular events (MI, PCI, coronary or peripheral bypass) in 29 LDL-apheresis patients of the Rostock Apheresis Center before and after start of apheresis n=29

  18. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Adverse events (august 2008) : • In 2740 sessions only 115 adverse events were stated (4,2 %) n=115

  19. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Adverse events (august 2008) : • Women show more side effects than men * p=0,014 *

  20. WAA Registry – LDL apheresis fraction • Adverse events (august 2008) : • Women drop off more frequent than men * p=0,012 *

  21. WAA Registry LDL apheresis – a concept to compare outcomes with a control group • Problems: • Small group of patients with LDL-apheresis • Only few countries with reimbursement • Ethical concerns with an apheresis sham group in this high risk population

  22. WAA Registry LDL apheresis – a concept to compare oucomes with a control group • Proposal for a solution: • International control group with patients actually showing the indication for apheresis in countries where therapy is not available • Both groups with optimal conventional therapy • As new study or as historical control (e.g. with established databases)

  23. WAA Registry LDL apheresis fraction – Conclusions • Conclusion I: • WAA registry LDL fraction is still relatively small • Yet the submitted data gives information about modalities, quality und results of LDL-apheresis therapy in different countries (so far only Europe)

  24. WAA Registry LDL apheresis fraction – Conclusions • Conclusion II: • Number of patients per center differs considerably • Men are more frequent treated than women • Diagnoses leading to apheresis are rather unspecific • Peripheral access is mostly used • Prevailing techniques: DALI and Octo (MDF) • (eg) Citrate is the leading anticoagulant

  25. WAA Registry LDL apheresis fraction – Conclusions • Conclusion III: • LDL-apheresis is well tolerated • Women show more side effects and drop off more often than men • Patients show a good quality of life and a rather good functional ability under LDL-apheresis • Cardiovascular events are clearly reduced (Rostock, and personal information from Prague) • Studies are needed to prove this in general • A control group could include maximally but not sufficiently treated patients with no access to LDL-apheresis or historical controls

More Related