Safety of electrooxidation for urea removal in a wearable artificial kidney is compromised by formation of glucose degradation products

A major challenge for the development of a wearable artificial kidney (WAK) is the removal of urea from the spent dialysate, as urea is the waste solute with the highest daily molar production and is difficult to adsorb. Here we present results on glucose degradation products (GDPs) formed during electrooxidation (EO), a technique that applies a current to the dialysate to convert urea into nitrogen, carbon dioxide, and hydrogen gas. Uremic plasma and peritoneal effluent were dialyzed for 8 hours with a WAK with and without EO-based dialysate regeneration. Samples were taken regularly during treatment. GDPs (glyoxal, methylglyoxal, and 3-deoxyglucosone) were measured in EO- and non-EO-treated fluids. Glyoxal and methylglyoxal concentrations increased 26- and 11-fold, respectively, in uremic plasma (at [glucose] 7 mmol/L) and 209- and 353-fold, respectively, in peritoneal effluent (at [glucose] 100 mmol/L) during treatment with EO, whereas no change was observed in GDP concentrations during dialysate regeneration without EO. EO for dialysate regeneration in a WAK is currently not safe due to the generation of GDPs which are not biocompatible.

Link: https://doi.org/10.1111/aor.14040

Share this publication

More publications

Sustainable and accessible hemodialysis: life cycle assessment on central acid delivery system

Authors: Chang-Lung Tsai, Abass Fehintola, Guus Crooijmans, Jeroen Vollenbroek, Brett Duane, Karin Gerritsen
Journal: BMC Nephrology
Year: 2025

Read more

Green haemodialysis: comparison of dialysis bags versus fresenius granumix at the AOU Policlinico di Modena, Italy

Authors: James Larkin, Gaetano Alfano, Rodrigo Martínez Cadenas, Karin G.F. Gerritsen, Abass Fehintola , Gabrielle Donati, Brett Duane
Journal: Journal of Nephrology
Year: 2025

Read more

Green nephrology: from evidence to action

Authors: Katherine A. Barraclough, Karin Gerritsen
Journal: Nature Reviews Nephrology
Year: 2025

Read more