Chronic Kidney Disease Associated Pruritus (CKD-aP) represents a distressing skin itch symptom that affects 20-42% of adults on dialysis. We recently conducted the first CKD-aP prevalence study in Switzerland. Results showed that 25% of individuals on hemodialysis experience CKD-aP with 80% suffering from moderate to severe itching. CKD-aP is associated with sleep disturbances, compromised quality of life, social isolation and increased risk of hospitalization and death. CKD-aP may be related to increased uremic toxins, endogenous opioid or immune system dysregulation, peripheral neuropathy with abnormal cutaneous innervation and nerve conduction. In this context, the effect of non-pharmacological management approaches like hand massage on nerve conduction, autonomic stress responses and skin inflammation deserve more attention. Few studies have evaluated the effect of short-term massage (3-4 weeks) on CKD-aP and showed improvement on outcomes evaluated 48 hours after the intervention. The study will be offered to all eligible CKD-aP patients; however, a balanced sex distribution is unlikely due to the male predominance in this population.
This study does not present any risks related to physical or psychological harm to participants. Participants will benefit from a promising non-invasive complementary therapy. Additionally, this study may contribute to a better understanding of the CKD-aP pathogenesis.
The primary objective of this study is to determine whether hand-massage by nurses has an effect on itch severity, Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) and sleep in hemodialysis patients with CKD-aP, at one and three months, as compared to usual care, and to explore the lived experience of patients receiving the hand-massage intervention.
A sequential multicenter Explanatory Mixed Methods design will be used. A randomized controlled trial design with two study arms will be conducted first (phase 1), followed by descriptive qualitative research (phase 2).
Phase 1: A total sample size of 54 participants (intervention group n=27; control group n= 27) will be recruted for the RCT. Phase 2: 12 participants from the intervention group who completed the intervention will be recruited to participate in the individual semi-structured interviews.
Participants randomized to the intervention group (n=27) will receive hand-massage that consists of 10 min hand-massage, three times/week for the first month, then once/week for the two consecutive months.
Participants assigned to the control group will receive uninterrupted attention from the nurse via a conversation without use of physical touch for 10 min, three times /week for the first month, then once/month for the two consecutive months.
Questionnaires will be administered by the research assistant who will be blinded to group allocations. Data will be collected at baseline, at one month and at three months, for all outcomes.
Phase 2: Participants from the intervention group who completed the hand-massage intervention will be recruited by the project manager or the research assistant to participate in individual semi-structured interviews.The interviews will be recorded, transcribed and coded using MaxQDA software, enabling a thematic content analysis.
Statistical analyses will be performed in Stata v16 on an intention-to-treat basis. Descriptive statistics will summarize baseline characteristics; between-group differences will be tested with t-tests Repeated measures ANOVA with one between-groups factor (group assignment) and one within-groups factor (time) will be carried out to assess changes in continuous outcome within-subjects across observations. Sex and gender will be recorded and reported in line with HRA/swiss-ethics guidance; subgroup analyses will be explored where numbers allow, acknowledging that balanced sex distribution is unlikely given the epidemiology of the dialysis population.