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Bulletin of the World Health Organization logoLink to Bulletin of the World Health Organization
. 2021 Nov 4;100(2):155–160. doi: 10.2471/BLT.21.286792

Peritoneal dialysis care during the COVID-19 pandemic, Thailand

Interventions de dialyse péritonéale en période de pandémie de COVID-19, Thaïlande

Cuidados de diálisis peritoneal durante la pandemia de la COVID-19 en Tailandia

رعاية غسيل الكلى البريتوني أثناء جائحة كوفيد 19، تايلند

泰国新型冠状病毒肺炎疫情期间的腹膜透析护理

Лечение перитонеальным диализом во время пандемии COVID-19, Таиланд

Talerngsak Kanjanabuch a, Krit Pongpirul b,
PMCID: PMC8795847  PMID: 35125540

Abstract

Problem

The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic could affect health service provision of less urgent interventions, such as peritoneal dialysis for chronic kidney disease patients.

Approach

To assess how peritoneal dialysis centres in Thailand adapted their provision of care, we invited medical directors and peritoneal dialysis managers to respond to an online survey on 1 July 2021. We asked whether they had modified or deferred their training, catheter insertion or removal, intravenous supplements, follow-up and home visits, and workload.

Local setting

Patients needing dialysis receive peritoneal dialysis free of charge in Thailand. As of 31 December 2020, 240 peritoneal dialysis centres in Thailand have provided care to 32 284 patients.

Relevant changes

At 24.6% (29/118) of centres, educational sessions for patients were modified. Catheter insertion continued at 71.9% (82/114) of centres. Few facilities (19.7%; 23/117) continued to perform peritoneal equilibration tests as usual. On-site intravenous injections were mostly transferred to health centres close to the patients’ homes. Most centres reduced their outpatient follow-up visits (51.7%; 61/118) and stopped visiting patients at home (66.9%; 79/118). Peritoneal dialysis nurses reported an increased workload at 62.7% (74/118) of centres, and in many instances (66.1%; 78/118) were providing nursing care to COVID-19 patients and administering COVID-19 vaccines.

Lessons learnt

Health-care providers altered clinical care activities to protect their patients from COVID-19. However, further evidence is needed on the consequences of such alteration in care. To prepare for future pandemics, actors need to explore nonconventional peritoneal dialysis care as well as financial and nonfinancial incentive mechanisms for such care.

Introduction

The coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic has challenged health systems worldwide. In Thailand, the pandemic has gradually affected the health-care provision for other diseases than COVID-19, including peritoneal dialysis for patients with chronic kidney diseases. These patients, as other people living with comorbidities, are more likely to experience more severe COVID-19 and die of the disease.1

As of 30 September 2021, 379 peritoneal dialysis patients had been infected with COVID-19 in the country. Of these, 118 died in the hospital or within 3 months after the onset of infection, 144 recovered, and 117 were still hospitalized (the Peritoneal Dialysis Advisory Board, Nephrology Society of Thailand, unpublished data, 1 October 2021). Furthermore, the massive influx of COVID-19 patients to intensive care units increased the risk of critically ill peritoneal dialysis patients being denied intensive treatment, despite the fact that most dialysis patients had a chance of survival when treated properly. Decreasing living organ donation and a decline in deceased transplant donation also increased the risk of dying for patients waiting for a kidney transplant.

As a nonurgent intervention, peritoneal dialysis services for people with kidney disease were also affected by the overwhelmed health system. Here we describe how peritoneal dialysis centres in Thailand adapted their services to protect their patients during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Local setting

Thailand’s universal coverage scheme provides financial support for selected health-care services to the majority of Thai citizens. In 2008, the Peritoneal Dialysis First policy was added to the scheme to ensure that patients with chronic kidney diseases have access to free-of-charge dialysis care. Continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis is provided as the first-line dialysis modality, whereas the patients with peritoneal dialysis contraindication or a history of technical failure associated with peritoneal dialysis can receive haemodialysis without additional payment. Patients who are medically suitable for peritoneal dialysis can choose haemodialysis as the first-line treatment, but they have to fully self-fund dialysis-related costs.2,3 Medications, including short-acting erythropoiesis-stimulating agents, as well as 2-litre manual glucose-based dialysates (capped at five bags daily), are fully reimbursed if they are listed in the Thai National List of Essential Medicine.

The policy has triggered an increase in the number of peritoneal dialysis patients and dialysis centres. In 2016, the prevalence and incidence of patients needing peritoneal dialysis were 26 450 (395 per million population) and 10 783 (161 per million population), respectively.4 The proportion of peritoneal dialysis patients among total dialysis population has increased from 5.5% (1198/21 839) before 2008 to 30.7% (26 450/86 116) in 2016.4

As of 31 December 2020, there were 3 2284 peritoneal dialysis patients, 1176 nephrologists, 637 peritoneal dialysis nurses and 240 peritoneal dialysis centres in Thailand. These centres are usually located in a designated area of a hospital, separated from the outpatient department, and are run by a peritoneal dialysis nurse under supervision of a nephrologist. Most facilities make nurse-led home visits, nurses from 54.5% (12/22) of the facilities visit all patients, while nurses from 45.5% (10/22) of facilities visit selected patients.5

Approach

To assess how peritoneal dialysis centres adapted to the changed circumstances, on 1 July 2021 we invited medical directors and peritoneal dialysis managers from centres across Thailand to participate in an one-time online survey about service provision during the pandemic. If two representatives from the same centre provided conflicting responses to the survey, we communicated with both to solve the conflict.

Under normal circumstances, new patients receive both individual and group trainings on-site. However, during the outbreak, centres could reduce the number of training days and the hours of training per day. The on-site training and group activities could be replaced by virtual or already available video-assisted training modules.

For implantation or replacement of the catheter, some clinics only performed these procedures when deemed clinically necessary, if a patient required urgent kidney replacement therapy, or if catheter-related infection or malfunction occurred. Other centres postponed the catheter placement despite prolonging the uraemic condition and lowering quality of life for the patient. The semiquantitative peritoneal equilibration test, which is used to assess peritoneal membrane transport function, could be stopped or only performed when clinically necessary.

To further reduce in-person interactions, centres could either stop providing intravenous iron and nutritional supplements or injection of erythropoiesis-stimulating agent on-site, switch to oral supplements or direct these services to health-care facilities for patients uncomfortable with self-administration.

The centre could also increase the interval of the regular outpatient follow-up visits or change to a hybrid between in-person and virtual follow-up. The outpatient centre implemented essential measures, such as physical distancing and minimizing contact time. In-centre peritoneal dialysis catheter exit-site dressing was done only for patients with complications. Home visits by a peritoneal dialysis nurse could either be stopped or only performed for patients with post-peritonitis.

Relevant changes

A cohort of 22 peritoneal dialysis centres showed that, compared with 2019, the number of catheter insertions significantly reduced during 2020 (Table 1).6,7 Catheter removal and re-insertion remained relatively unchanged because delaying such intervention might harm patients and increase mortality.8 Hospitalization of patients significantly reduced by 10% (from 895 hospitalizations to 805), presumably due to the reallocation of beds to COVID-19 patients (Table 1).

Table 1. Characteristics of peritoneal dialysis care, Thailand, 2019–2020.

Variable No. (%)
P b
2019
(n = 2482)a
2020
(n = 3496)a
New cases 1281 (51.6) 1027 (29.4) < 0.001 
Catheter insertion 1271 (51.2) 1027 (29.4) < 0.001
Catheter re-insertion 7 (0.3) 6 (0.2) 0.37
Catheter removal 42 (1.7) 41 (1.2) 0.09
Hospitalization 895 (36.1) 805 (23.0) < 0.001
Death 124 (5.0) 137 (3.9) 0.05

a Active cases.

b We used χ2 test.

Note: The data is from the Peritoneal Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study, which have surveyed 22 peritoneal dialysis facilities, each of which provide treatment to at least 20 peritoneal dialysis patients.6,7

In total 198 professionals responded to our survey, covering 118 centres. The survey revealed that the peritoneal dialysis centres took different actions to protect their patients from acquiring COVID-19, and many of the actions were to reduce the person-to-person interactions. For example, 75.4% (89/118) of centres attempted to provide a full educational session to their new patients, whereas the remaining quarter either reduced the training duration or changed to video-assisted training or e-learning technology.

The majority of centres continued to do catheter insertion (71.9%; 82/114), while 24.6% (28/114) only performed the procedure when clinically necessary. Few centres (19.7%; 23/117) continued to perform peritoneal equilibration tests as usual; most centres (55.6%; 65/117) only performed this procedure in selected patients, including patients with ultrafiltration failure or inadequate dialysis. On-site intravenous injections were mostly transferred to health centres close to the patients’ homes. Only 32.2% (38/118) of the centres continued the regular outpatient follow-up visits, whereas 51.7% (61/118) increased the follow-up interval and 16.1% (19/118) switched to video conferencing, text messaging or telephone calls (Table 2). The low uptake of virtual follow-up could be explained by the fact that 71.8% (84/117) of the centres did not have full teleconferencing facilities for provider–patient communication.

Table 2. Changes in service provision of peritoneal dialysis centres during the COVID-19 outbreak, Thailand, Jul–Aug 2021.

Service No. (%)
Responding centres (n = 240)a No change Deferred Modified
Patient training 118 (49.2) 89 (75.4) 1 (0.8) 28 (23.7)b
Catheter insertion 114 (47.5) 82 (71.9) 4 (3.5) 28 (24.6)c
Catheter removal 118 (49.2) 98 (83.1) 7 (5.9) 13 (11.0)d
Visit
Outpatient 118 (49.2) 38 (32.2) 61 (51.7) 19 (16.1)b
Home 118 (49.2) 18 (15.3) 79 (66.9) 21 (17.8)e
Peritoneal equilibration test 117 (48.8) 23 (19.7) 29 (24.8) 65 (55.6)f
Intravenous injection
Iron supplements 115 (47.9) 38 (33.0)f 8 (7.0)f 39 (33.9)g
Nutritional supplements 115 (47.9) 13 (11.3)g 12 (10.4)g 7 (6.1)h
Erythropoiesis-stimulating agent 118 (49.2) 19 (16.1) 0 (0.0) 99 (83.9)d

COVID-19: coronavirus disease 2019.

a No. of peritoneal dialysis centres in Thailand.

b Modified practices were either shortening the duration, increasing the interval or switching to telemedicine.

c Catheter insertion was performed only when clinically necessary.

d Transferred to health centres close to the patients’ home.

e Only visited post-peritonitis patients.

f Only performed when clinically necessary.

g Only 84 facilities provided iron supplement injections to their patients before the pandemic.

h Only 32 facilities provided nutritional supplement injections to their patients before the pandemic.

Notes: Inconsistencies in some values may arise due to rounding. We obtained the data from the Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis Centre Activity Survey.

Home visits made by a peritoneal dialysis nurse were stopped by 66.9% (79/118) of centres, while 15.3% (18/118) of centres still visited their patients and 17.8% (21/118) of centres only visited patients with post-peritonitis (Table 2).

More than half of the centres (62.7%; 74/118) reported an increased workload for the peritoneal dialysis nurses, whereas 4.2% (5/118) reported the opposite. More than half (66.1%; 78/118) of the nurses had to perform nonperitoneal dialysis functions, such as providing nursing care to COVID-19 patients and administering COVID-19 vaccines. The majority of centres (94.9%; 112/118) did not encounter a problem with shipment of dialysis bags during the pandemic.

Lessons learnt

Besides increased risk of severe COVID-19, patients on peritoneal dialysis in Thailand have experienced changes in practices and procedures linked to their care during the pandemic (Box 1). To substitute outpatient and home visits, some centres attempted telemedicine but the efficacy of this approach is unclear because of the poor patient compliance, poor internet access – especially on the patient side – and unclear financial incentives to the health-care providers. Further research is needed to investigate if telemedicine is a suitable option for patients on peritoneal dialysis, since an effective physical assessment must be done in person. Pitting oedema, cuff and tunnel infections require a physical examination, and cloudy dialysate fluid needs a close-up visual inspection. However, several precise monitoring solutions are available, such as digital weight recording devices and remote patient monitoring devices with pulse oximeters to assess fluid retention. Financing mechanisms for nonconventional peritoneal dialysis care through telemedicine should be further explored.

Box 1. Summary of main lessons learnt.

  • An infectious disease outbreak could reduce the number of nonurgent interventions, such as catheter insertion for peritoneal dialysis.

  • The efficacy of using telemedicine as a substitute for outpatient and home visits is unclear due to poor patient compliance, poor internet access and unclear financial incentives to the health-care providers.

  • While health-care providers have been trying to reduce or modify medical care activities as they see appropriate, further evidence is needed on the consequences of such alterations in care.

As the first two COVID-19 waves only affected three and one peritoneal dialysis patients, respectively, experts hypothesized that many centres were not fully prepared for the large wave starting on 23 April 2021, although recommendations on care for noninfected peritoneal dialysis patients were published in May 2020.9 Nevertheless, to protect their patients from acquiring COVID-19, health-care providers at most centres reduced or modified medical-care activities as they saw appropriate. However, some of these approaches might have negatively affected the clinical care process for some patients, and the patients might not fully understand how the changes in care would affect them. Hence, further evidence is needed on the consequences of nonconventional disease-specific care. Changes in care also had to be supported by the already fixed global budget, and key performance indicators10 could be adversely affected by the COVID pandemic.

Peritoneal dialysis patients infected with COVID-19 faced additional challenges since the government had mandated that patients had to be admitted to the hospital that made the diagnosis. Some of these hospitals are unable to provide peritoneal dialysis care, and even if patients were admitted to a peritoneal dialysis-equipped facility, many patients had to transfer from manual peritoneal dialysis to either automated peritoneal dialysis or haemodialysis. This transfer might put the patients at risk of retaining salt and middle-molecule toxins, despite equivalence in the effectiveness of manual and automated modalities being demonstrated in meta-analysis studies.11,12

To prepare for future pandemics, peritoneal dialysis centres need to explore innovative approaches for education as well as physical and laboratory assessments of patients. Furthermore, the public health insurance schemes should introduce financial and nonfinancial incentive mechanisms for nonconventional peritoneal dialysis care, including telemedicine activities, and relevant professional associations should develop guidelines for the care of patients with chronic diseases during infectious outbreaks.

Acknowledgements

We thank Jadej Thammatach-Aree, National Health Security Office, Thailand; Piyatida Chuengsaman, Banphaeo Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand; the Thailand Peritoneal Dialysis Outcomes and Practice Patterns Study (PDOPPS) investigators and steering committee; respondents of the Thailand Peritoneal Dialysis Centre Activity Survey; and Advisory Board of Continuous Ambulatory Peritoneal Dialysis, the Nephrology Society of Thailand.

Funding:

The survey was supported by the Thailand Science Research and Innovation Fund Chulalongkorn University CU_FRB65_hea (19)_026_30_07 and the National Research Council of Thailand (156/2560).

Competing interests:

TK has received consultancy fees from Visterra Inc. as a country investigator and received speaking honoraria from AstraZeneca and Baxter International Inc.

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