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Secondary hyperoxalemia is a common feature in patients with chronic renal failure, but oxalate removal is not adequately accomplished by regular dialysis treatment. Oxalate removal in two groups of patients, 11 on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD) and 12 on hemodialysis (HD), was investigated. HD patients were studied during a regular bicarbonate dialysis and during hemodiafiltration (HDF) with a high convective component (UF = 66 mL/min) and AN69 filter (Hospal Filtral 12, 1.2 m, Hospal Industrie, Meyzieu, France). All HD and HDF spent dialysate and all 24 hr CAPD effluents were collected; oxalate concentration was measured by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) using an ion exchange column. Both oxalate flux and total extraction were statistically higher during HDF treatments (HDF = 1.87 ± 0.77 mg/min and 335.9 ± 131.5 mg/session, respectively; HD = 0.99 ± 0.74 mg/min, 226 ± 153 mg/session, respectively; p < 0.02). The positive interaction of convective and diffusive fluxes probably played a major role in oxalate removal during treatment with a high convective component; solute-membrane interactions can occur by using either cellulosic or synthetic fibers. In CAPD patients, oxalate removal (76.42 ± 50.85 mg/day) was lower than in patients on either HD or HDF, although weekly oxalate extraction was statistically no different between CAPD (535.46 ± 356 mg/week) and HD (677.72 ± 460.82 mg/week). It was concluded that HDF is more effective than HD or CAPD in oxalate removal. Long-term studies are needed to demonstrate whether these kinetic findings have clinical relevance.