A classification system has been proposed to standardize the definition of acute kidney injury in adults. These criteria of risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage renal disease were given the acronym of RIFLE. We have modified the criteria based on 150 critically ill pediatric RIFLE (pRIFLE) patients to assess acute kidney injury incidence and course along with renal and/or non-renal comorbidities. Of these children, 11 required dialysis and 24 died. Patients without acute kidney injury in the first week of intensive care admission were less likely to subsequently develop renal Injury or Failure; however, 82% of acute kidney injury occurred in this initial week. Within this group of 123 children, 60 reached pRIFLEmax for Risk, 32 reached Injury, and 31 reached Failure. Acute kidney injury during admission was an independent predictor of intensive care; hospital length of stay and an increased risk of death independent of the Pediatric Risk of Mortality (PRISM II) score (odds ratio 3.0). Our results show that a majority of critically ill children develop acute kidney injury by pRIFLE criteria and do so early in the course of intensive care. Acute kidney injury is associated with mortality and may lead to increased hospital costs. We suggest that the pRIFLE criteria serves to characterize the pattern of acute kidney injury in critically ill children.
BackgroundSingle-center studies suggest that neonatal acute kidney injury (AKI)
is associated with poor outcomes. However, inferences regarding the
association between AKI, mortality, and hospital length of stay are limited
due to the small sample size of those studies. In order to determine whether
neonatal AKI is independently associated with increased mortality and longer
hospital stay, we analyzed the Assessment of Worldwide Acute Kidney
Epidemiology in Neonates (AWAKEN) database.MethodsAll neonates admitted to 24 participating neonatal intensive care
units from four countries (Australia, Canada, India, United States) between
January 1 and March 31, 2014, were screened. Of 4273 neonates screened, 2022
(47·3%) met study criteria. Exclusion criteria included: no
intravenous fluids ≥48 hours, admission ≥14 days of life,
congenital heart disease requiring surgical repair at <7 days of life,
lethal chromosomal anomaly, death within 48 hours, inability to determine
AKI status or severe congenital kidney abnormalities. AKI was defined using
a standardized definition —i.e., serum creatinine rise of
≥0.3 mg/dL (26.5 mcmol/L) or ≥50% from previous
lowest value, and/or if urine output was <1 mL/kg/h on postnatal days 2
to 7.FindingsIncidence of AKI was 605/2022 (29·9%). Rates varied
by gestational age groups (i.e., ≥22 to <29 weeks
=47·9%; ≥29 to <36 weeks
=18·3%; and ≥36 weeks
=36·7%). Even after adjusting for multiple potential
confounding factors, infants with AKI had higher mortality compared to those
without AKI [(59/605 (9·7%) vs. 20/1417
(1·4%); p< 0.001; adjusted OR=4·6
(95% CI=2·5–8·3);
p=<0·0001], and longer hospital stay
[adjusted parameter estimate 8·8 days (95%
CI=6·1–11·5);
p<0·0001].InterpretationNeonatal AKI is a common and independent risk factor for mortality
and longer hospital stay. These data suggest that neonates may be impacted
by AKI in a manner similar to pediatric and adult patients.FundingUS National Institutes of Health, University of Alabama at
Birmingham, Cincinnati Children’s, University of New Mexico.
Results: pRIFLE ⌬SCr and AKIN led to identical AKI distributions. pRIFLE ⌬CCl resulted in 14.5% (critically ill) and 11% (noncritical) more patients diagnosed with AKI compared to other methods (P 0.05). Different bSCr estimates led to differences in AKI incidence, from 12% (AdmSCr) to 87.8% (NormsMin) (P 0.05) in the critically ill group and from 4.6% (eCCl 100 ) to 43.1% (NormsMin) (P 0.05) in the noncritical group.Conclusions: AKI definition variation causes interstudy heterogeneity. AKI definition should be standardized so that results can be compared across studies.
Earlier, better prediction of severe AKI has the potential to improve AKI associated patient outcomes. Compared to isolated, context-free changes in SCr, renal angina risk assessment improved accuracy for prediction of severe AKI in critically ill children and young adults.
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