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INVESTIGATIVE REPORT
Mortality of Haemodialysis Patients With and Without Chronic Itch:
A Follow-up Study of the German Epidemiological Hemodialysis
Itch Study (GEHIS)
Katarzyna GROCHULSKA 1 , Robert OFENLOCH 1 , Thomas METTANG 2 and Elke WEISSHAAR 1
Department of Clinical Social Medicine, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg, and 2 Department of Nephrology, DKD Helios Clinic,
Wiesbaden, Germany
1
The GEHIS (German Epidemiological Hemodialysis Itch
Study) is a representative cohort study started in 2013
with 860 haemodialysis (HD) patients in 25 German
dialysis units. Chronic itch (CI) has been reported to
be a poor prognostic marker for patients on HD; how
ever, this has not been investigated in a representative
patient cohort. In 2017, all HD patients were contacted
again to investigate mortality in those with and with
out CI and to identify its determinants. Patients’ cha-
racteristics, study instruments and CI were assessed,
as in 2013. The response rate was 84.2% (n = 724).
One-year mortality was 15.3%. Mortality was signifi-
cantly higher in those with secondary scratch lesions
compared with those with non-affected skin. This was
also true after controlling for age and sex in a multiva-
riate model. This study demonstrates a high mortality
in HD patients; however, mortality depends on itch in-
tensity, not on the occurrence of CI itself.
Key words: epidemiology; GEHIS; haemodialysis; itch; morta-
lity; pruritus; uraemic itch.
Accepted Jan 23, 2019; E-published Jan 23, 2019
Acta Derm Venereol 2019; 99: 423–428.
Corr: Elke Weisshaar, Department of Clinical Social Medicine, Occupa-
tional and Environmental Dermatology, University Hospital Heidelberg,
Voßstr. 2, DE-69115 Heidelberg, Germany. E-mail: elke.weisshaar@med.
uni-heidelberg.de
E
nd-stage renal disease (ESRD)-associated itch, also
called uraemic or renal itch, remains a challenge
in daily clinical practice, in dermatology as well as in
other fields of medicine. Due to lack of knowledge about
the underlying pathophysiology of chronic itch (CI) in
haemodialysis (HD), effective treatment modalities are
lacking (1). To close this gap, we launched the German
Epidemiological Hemodialysis Itch Study (GEHIS) in
2013 (2). In our first analyses, CI and associated factors
were assessed using 3 different prevalence measures,
showing that 25.2% (point prevalence) were affected by
CI (2). Additional analyses of GEHIS investigated the
role of, for example, haemodialysis characteristics and
comorbidities (3), severity of CI and its clinical picture
on the skin (4), health-related quality of life (HRQOL)
(5) and the role of medications, such as loop diuretics (6).
In 1991, it was reported for the first time that renal itch
is an indicator of poor outcome, and later that the mor-
SIGNIFICANCE
The German Epidemiological Hemodialysis Itch Study in-
vestigated chronic itch and associated factors in patients
on haemodialysis. In 2013, 860 patients from 25 German
dialysis units were included in the study. In 2017 the same
haemodialysis patients were investigated again. During
the observation period 48.1% of the haemodialysis pa-
tients had died. Mortality was significantly higher in those
with secondary scratch lesions compared with those with
chronic itch in normal-looking skin, which means that those
with scratch lesions on the skin were more prone to die.
Chronic itch itself was not associated with earlier death.
Dermatologists should pay close attention to haemodialysis
patients with chronic itch who have severe scratch lesions
on the skin.
tality of HD patients may be influenced by the presence
of itch (7–9). This appears to be influenced by sleep
disturbance. Another study reported a 22% higher mor-
tality rate in patients with moderate to extreme pruritus.
A 2-fold increase in risk of mortality was shown in HD
patients in the self-assessed “poor sleep” quality group
compared with the “good sleep” group (10). However, in
these studies severity and duration of itch were not clearly
defined in terms of being, for example, acute or chronic
(6 weeks and longer), or these studies were performed in
non-representative patient populations. The aims of the
follow-up study presented here were to report the mor-
tality rate of HD patients with and without CI. Particular
attention was paid to the presence and characteristics of
CI and to the occurrence of sleep disturbances on the
mortality of HD patients.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
German Epidemiological Hemodialysis Itch Study (GEHIS)
GEHIS was designed as a prospective cohort study and all baseline
data were assessed in 2013. The study design and demographic
characteristics of the included patients have been reported in
detail elsewhere (2). GEHIS includes 860 HD patients from 25
dialysis units, which were selected randomly from a cluster-sample
reflecting the regional distribution of dialysis units throughout Ger-
many. The follow-up study was approved by the ethics committee
of the University of Heidelberg (S-670/2016) and conducted in
accordance with the World Medical Association’s Declaration of
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license. www.medicaljournals.se/acta
Journal Compilation © 2019 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.
doi: 10.2340/00015555-3125
Acta Derm Venereol 2019; 99: 423–428