Data underlying the publication: Advancements in Peritoneal Dialysis Catheterization: Introducing a Modified Single-Port Laparoscopic Technique

DOI:10.4121/1260f43a-8edb-4f90-9e3e-1fdf359c4c9e.v1
The DOI displayed above is for this specific version of this dataset, which is currently the latest. Newer versions may be published in the future. For a link that will always point to the latest version, please use
DOI: 10.4121/1260f43a-8edb-4f90-9e3e-1fdf359c4c9e

Datacite citation style

Fu, Yuting; Ma, Zhimian; Li, Jun; Ma, Jifang; Sui, Manshu et. al. (2025): Data underlying the publication: Advancements in Peritoneal Dialysis Catheterization: Introducing a Modified Single-Port Laparoscopic Technique. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/1260f43a-8edb-4f90-9e3e-1fdf359c4c9e.v1
Other citation styles (APA, Harvard, MLA, Vancouver, Chicago, IEEE) available at Datacite

Dataset

This dataset contains the complete anonymised clinical and operative records of a single-centre, retrospective, two-arm cohort study conducted at the Department of Nephrology, First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, People’s Republic of China. The study compared a modified single-port laparoscopic (SLC) versus conventional open surgical (OSC) peritoneal-dialysis (PD) catheter insertion technique in adults with end-stage renal disease (ESRD).

  • Ethics and legal compliance

The study protocol was reviewed and approved by the Ethics Committee of the First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University (Approval No. IRB-AF/SC-04/02.0). All participants provided written informed consent; personal identifiers were removed before compilation of this public repository.

  • Study population and inclusion/exclusion criteria

Consecutive patients ≥ 18 years who received their first PD catheter between March 2023 and September 2023 were screened. Inclusion: ESRD scheduled for first PD catheter. Exclusion: severe cardiopulmonary dysfunction, pregnancy, abdominal-wall defects, active intra-abdominal infection/mass, or other surgical contraindications (e.g. severe psychiatric disorder). Thirty eligible patients were enrolled and followed until September 2024 (minimum follow-up 12 months).

History

  • 2025-11-13 first online, published, posted

Publisher

4TU.ResearchData

Format

*. PDF, *.csv, *.txt

Funding

  • Comparison of the clinical outcomes of single-port laparoscopic versus open peritoneal dialysis catheter placement (grant code BQ-24006) Beijing Medical and Health Public Welfare Foundation

Organizations

First Affiliated Hospital of Harbin Medical University, Department of Nephropathy
Northeast Forestry University Hospital, Department of Internal Medicine

DATA

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