Response to the hepatitis B virus vaccine in haemodialysis patients: influence of malnutrition and its importance as a risk factor for morbidity and mortality
Autor: | R. Gómez, Elvira Fernández, M. A. Betriu, J. Montoliu |
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Rok vydání: | 1996 |
Předmět: |
Transplantation
medicine.medical_specialty education.field_of_study Hepatitis B vaccine biology business.industry medicine.medical_treatment Population Serum albumin Gastroenterology Vaccination Nephrology Internal medicine Immunology medicine biology.protein Hemodialysis Risk factor education business Blood urea nitrogen Dialysis |
Zdroj: | Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. 11:1559-1563 |
ISSN: | 1460-2385 0931-0509 |
DOI: | 10.1093/ndt/11.8.1559 |
Popis: | Objective. To assess if malnutrition influences the response to the hepatitis B virus vaccine in haemodialysis patients and whether this correlates with morbidity and mortality in these patients. Design. A 4-year prospective open study. Setting. Haemodialysis unit of a 434-bed University Hospital. Patients. Sixty-four patients with end-stage chronic renal failure on maintenance haemodialysis. Interventions. Three-dose vaccination series with recombinant hepatitis B virus vaccine. Measurements. Antibody formation against the vaccine, predialysis serum urea, serum albumin and prealbumin, dialysis efficacy (Kt/V), protein catabolic rate (PCR), arm muscle circumference, triceps skinfold, serum parathyroid hormone concentration, mortality and morbidity (hospital days per year of dialysis). Results. Increase in age negatively influences the formation of antibodies (P=0.01), whereas serum albumin (P = 0.008) and predialysis blood urea concentration (P=0.004) are positively correlated with the formation of antibodies. Responders had significantly higher levels of serum albumin and prealbumin and predialysis blood urea than non-responders. The percentage of non-responders was higher (70%) in the group with predialysis blood urea concentration between 90 and 125 mg/dl than in those with predialysis blood urea concentrations between 176 and 225 mg/dl (14.2%). Patients with serum albumin levels between 3 and 3.5 g/dl were non-responders in a higher percentage (87.5%) than those with serum albumin levels between 4.5 and 5 g/dl (18.8%). After a 4-year follow-up, survival was 20% higher in the responder group (P < 0.05). Morbidity, expressed as hospital days per year of haemodialysis, was markedly lower in the responder group (10.4±2 versus 32±14 days, P=0.03). Conclusions. Malnutrition negatively influences the response to the hepatitis B virus vaccine in haemodialysis patients. Non-responders have higher morbidity and mortality than responders, and therefore the absence of response to the hepatitis B vaccine can be considered as a risk factor in the haemodialysis population. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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