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      Geographic and educational factors and risk of the first peritonitis episode in Brazilian Peritoneal Dialysis study (BRAZPD) patients.

      Clinical journal of the American Society of Nephrology : CJASN
      Regression Analysis, Disease-Free Survival, etiology, Humans, Chi-Square Distribution, Kidney Failure, Chronic, Aged, Risk Assessment, Treatment Outcome, Residence Characteristics, Time Factors, Healthcare Disparities, Male, Educational Status, Peritonitis, epidemiology, Health Services Accessibility, ethnology, Kaplan-Meier Estimate, Risk Factors, Brazil, adverse effects, Peritoneal Dialysis, mortality, Middle Aged, therapy, Female, microbiology, Proportional Hazards Models

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          Abstract

          Peritonitis remains as the most frequent cause of peritoneal dialysis (PD) failure, impairing patient's outcome. No large multicenter study has addressed socioeconomic, educational, and geographic issues as peritonitis risk factors in countries with a large geographic area and diverse socioeconomic conditions, such as Brazil. Incident PD patients recruited from 114 dialysis centers and reporting to BRAZPD, a multicenter observational study, from December 2004 through October 2007 were included. Clinical, dialysis-related, demographic, and socioeconomic variables were analyzed. Patients were followed up until their first peritonitis. Cox proportional model was used to determine independent factors associated with peritonitis. In a cumulative follow-up of 2032 patients during 22.026 patient-months, 474 (23.3%) presented a first peritonitis episode. In contrast to earlier findings, PD modality, previous hemodialysis, diabetes, gender, age, and family income were not risk predictors. Factors independently associated with increased hazard risk were lower educational level, non-white race, region where patients live, shorter distance from dialysis center, and lower number of patients per center. Educational level and geographic factors as well as race and center size are associated with risk for the first peritonitis, independent of socioeconomic status, PD modality, and comorbidities.

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