Background/Aims: Scarce physical activity predicts shorter survival in dialysis patients. However, the relationship between physical (motor) fitness and clinical outcomes has never been tested in these patients. Methods: We tested the predictive power of an established metric of motor fitness, the Six-Minute Walking Test (6MWT), for death, cardiovascular events and hospitalization in 296 dialysis patients who took part in the trial EXCITE (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01255969). Results: During follow up 69 patients died, 90 had fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events, 159 were hospitalized and 182 patients had the composite outcome. In multivariate Cox models - including the study allocation arm and classical and non-classical risk factors - an increase of 20 walked metres during the 6MWT was associated to a 6% reduction of the risk for the composite end-point (P=0.001) and a similar relationship existed between the 6MWT, mortality (P<0.001) and hospitalizations (P=0.03). A similar trend was observed for cardiovascular events but this relationship did not reach statistical significance (P=0.09). Conclusions: Poor physical performance predicts a high risk of mortality, cardiovascular events and hospitalizations in dialysis patients. Future studies, including phase-2 EXCITE, will assess whether improving motor fitness may translate into better clinical outcomes in this high risk population.

Physical performance and clinical outcomes in dialysis patients: A secondary analysis of the excite trial / C. Torino, F. Manfredini, D. Bolignano, F. Aucella, R. Baggetta, A. Barillà, Y. Battaglia, S. Bertoli, G. Bonanno, P. Castellino, D. Ciurlino, A. Cupisti, G. D'Arrigo, L. De Paola, F. Fabrizi, P. Fatuzzo, G. Fuiano, L. Lombardi, G. Lucisano, P. Messa, R. Rapanà, F. Rapisarda, S. Rastelli, L. Rocca-Rey, C. Summaria, A. Zuccalà, G. Tripepi, L. Catizone, C. Zoccali, F. Mallamaci. - In: KIDNEY & BLOOD PRESSURE RESEARCH. - ISSN 1420-4096. - 39:2-3(2014), pp. 205-211. [10.1159/000355798]

Physical performance and clinical outcomes in dialysis patients: A secondary analysis of the excite trial

P. Messa;L. Rocca-Rey;
2014

Abstract

Background/Aims: Scarce physical activity predicts shorter survival in dialysis patients. However, the relationship between physical (motor) fitness and clinical outcomes has never been tested in these patients. Methods: We tested the predictive power of an established metric of motor fitness, the Six-Minute Walking Test (6MWT), for death, cardiovascular events and hospitalization in 296 dialysis patients who took part in the trial EXCITE (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT01255969). Results: During follow up 69 patients died, 90 had fatal and non-fatal cardiovascular events, 159 were hospitalized and 182 patients had the composite outcome. In multivariate Cox models - including the study allocation arm and classical and non-classical risk factors - an increase of 20 walked metres during the 6MWT was associated to a 6% reduction of the risk for the composite end-point (P=0.001) and a similar relationship existed between the 6MWT, mortality (P<0.001) and hospitalizations (P=0.03). A similar trend was observed for cardiovascular events but this relationship did not reach statistical significance (P=0.09). Conclusions: Poor physical performance predicts a high risk of mortality, cardiovascular events and hospitalizations in dialysis patients. Future studies, including phase-2 EXCITE, will assess whether improving motor fitness may translate into better clinical outcomes in this high risk population.
No
English
Physical performance; Six-minute walking test; Chronic kidney disease; Dialysis; Clinical outcomes
Settore MED/14 - Nefrologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
2014
S. Karger AG
39
2-3
205
211
7
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
pubmed
crossref
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Physical performance and clinical outcomes in dialysis patients: A secondary analysis of the excite trial / C. Torino, F. Manfredini, D. Bolignano, F. Aucella, R. Baggetta, A. Barillà, Y. Battaglia, S. Bertoli, G. Bonanno, P. Castellino, D. Ciurlino, A. Cupisti, G. D'Arrigo, L. De Paola, F. Fabrizi, P. Fatuzzo, G. Fuiano, L. Lombardi, G. Lucisano, P. Messa, R. Rapanà, F. Rapisarda, S. Rastelli, L. Rocca-Rey, C. Summaria, A. Zuccalà, G. Tripepi, L. Catizone, C. Zoccali, F. Mallamaci. - In: KIDNEY & BLOOD PRESSURE RESEARCH. - ISSN 1420-4096. - 39:2-3(2014), pp. 205-211. [10.1159/000355798]
open
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
30
262
Article (author)
no
C. Torino, F. Manfredini, D. Bolignano, F. Aucella, R. Baggetta, A. Barillà, Y. Battaglia, S. Bertoli, G. Bonanno, P. Castellino, D. Ciurlino, A. Cupisti, G. D'Arrigo, L. De Paola, F. Fabrizi, P. Fatuzzo, G. Fuiano, L. Lombardi, G. Lucisano, P. Messa, R. Rapanà, F. Rapisarda, S. Rastelli, L. Rocca-Rey, C. Summaria, A. Zuccalà, G. Tripepi, L. Catizone, C. Zoccali, F. Mallamaci
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
355798.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Publisher's version/PDF
Dimensione 1.33 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
1.33 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/588729
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 23
  • Scopus 68
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 65
social impact