| Literature DB >> 19082634 |
David J Askenazi1, Namasivayam Ambalavanan, Stuart L Goldstein.
Abstract
Outcomes in critically ill neonates have improved over the past three decades, yet high residual mortality and morbidity rates exist. Acute kidney injury (AKI) is not just an innocent by-stander in the critically ill patient. Research on incidence and outcomes of AKI in the critically ill neonatal population is scarce. The objective of this publication is to (a) review original articles on the short- and long-term outcomes after neonatal AKI, (b) highlight key articles on adults and children with AKI in order to demonstrate how such insights might be applied to neonates, and (c) suggest clinical research studies to fill the gaps in our understanding of neonatal AKI. To date, observational studies suggest high rates of AKI and poor outcomes in critically ill neonates. Neonates with AKI are at risk of developing chronic kidney disease and hypertension. Large prospective studies are needed to test definitions and to better understand risk factors, incidence, independent outcomes, and mechanisms that lead to poor short- and long-term outcomes. Early biomarkers of AKI need to be explored in critically ill neonates. Infants with AKI need to be followed for sequelae after AKI.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 19082634 PMCID: PMC2755786 DOI: 10.1007/s00467-008-1060-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Nephrol ISSN: 0931-041X Impact factor: 3.714
Proposed working definitions for the classification of AKI in adults and children. In all three classifications either creatinine or urine output criteria suffice in staging (AKIN Acute Kidney Injury Network, Cr creatinine, GFR glomerular filtration rate, eCCl estimated creatinine clearance, SCr serum creatinine, ESRD end-stage renal disease)
| Adult | Pediatric | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AKIN | AKIN/RIFLE | RIFLE | pRIFLE | ||||
| Stage | Serum Cr | Urine output | Class | Serum Cr or GFR | Class | eCCl by Schwartz formula | Urine output |
| I | ↑ SCr >0.3 mg/dl or ↑ SCr >150–200% from baseline | <0.5 ml/kg per hour × 6 h | Risk | ↑SCr by 150% or GFR decrease by 25% | Risk | eCCl decrease by 25% | <0.5 ml/kg per hour × 8 h |
| II | ↑ SCr to >200-300% from baseline | <0.5 ml/kg per hour > 12 h | Injury | ↑ SCr by 200% or GFR decrease by 50% | Injury | eCCl decrease by 50% | <0.5 ml/kg per hour × 16 h |
| III | ↑ SCr of >300% from baseline or SCr > 4.0 mg/dl with an acute rise of at least 0.5 mg/dl | <0.3 ml/kg per hour >24 h or anuria for >12 h | Fail | ↑ SCr by 300% or SCr >4.0 mg/dl with acute rise of 0.5 mg/dl or GFR decrease by >75% | Fail | eCCl decrease by 75% or <35 ml/min per 1.73 m2 body surface area | <0.3 ml/kg per hour for 24 h or anuric for 12 h |
| Loss | Failure > 4 weeks | Loss | Failure > 4 weeks | ||||
| ESRD | Failure >3 months | ESRD | Failure >3 months | ||||
AKIN classification: an abrupt (within 48 h) reduction in kidney function required (adapted with permission [16])
RIFLE staging: R, I and F represent increasing stages of AKI (reproduced with permission [11])
pRIFLE eCCl based on Schwartz formula (reproduced with permission [17])
Inulin clearance GFR in healthy premature infants (adapted with permission from [22])
| Age | Clearance (ml/min per 1.73 m2) |
|---|---|
| Pre-term infants | |
| 1–3 days | 14.0 ± 5 |
| 1–7 days | 18.7 ± 5.5 |
| 4–8 days | 44.3 ± 9.3 |
| 3–13 days | 47.8 ± 10.7 |
| 1.5–4 months | 67.4 ± 16.6 |
| Term infants | |
| 1–3 days | 20.8 ± 5.0 |
| 4–14 days | 36.8 ± 7.2 |
| 1–3 months | 85.3 + 35.1 |
| 4–6 months | 87.4 ± 22.3 |
| 7–12 months | 96.2 + 12.2 |
| 1–2 years | 105.2 ± 17.3 |
Fig. 1Plasma creatinine in neonates (reproduced with permission from [23])
Fig. 2Age-related comparative yearly incidence of AKI (adapted with permission from [25])
Original articles on AKI in neonates (GA gestational age, BUN blood urea nitrogen, NICU neonatal intensive care unit, UOP urine output, DIC disseminated intravascular coagulation)
| Author | Type of study | Cases | Controls | Definition of AKI | Findings | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karlowicz and Adelman (1995) | Prospective case–control | 33 infants ≥ 36 weeks GA and 5 min Apgar scores ≤6 with severe asphyxia scores | 33 infants ≥ 36 weeks GA and 5 min Apgar scores ≤6 with moderate asphyxia scores | SCr > 1.5 mg/dl | AKI occurred in 61% of those with severe asphyxia and 0% in those with moderate asphyxia | |
| Agras et al. (2004) | Retrospective chart review | 45 term and preterm infants. Excluded cardiac | none | SCr > 1.5 mg/dl | Incidence; term = 3.4% | |
| Premature infants = 31% | ||||||
| Non-oliguric = 40% | ||||||
| Asphyxia = 40% | ||||||
| Mortality = 24.4% | ||||||
| Aggarwal et al. (2005) | Prospective case–control | 25 infants ≥ 34 weeks, 5 min Apgar scores ≤6. Exclude those on diuretics or nephrotoxins | 25 matched (GA and birth weight) infants | SCr > 1.5 mg/dl | AKI incidence: cases 56%, controls 4% | Clinical markers of asphyxia were better predictors of adverse outcome than were renal function tests |
| Apgar scores ≤ 6 pick up most cases of renal failure | ||||||
| Gupta et al. (2005) | Prospective case–control | 70 infants with 5 min Apgar scores ≤6 | 28 healthy controls | SCr > 1.5 mg/dl | AKI incidence: cases = 47.1%, controls 0% | 78% of AKI non-oliguric |
| Hospital mortality: cases = 14.1% vs ? | ||||||
| Mathur et al. (2006) | Prospective case–control | 52 infants with sepsis | 146 infants with sepsis | BUN > 20 mg/dl on two occasions | AKI incidence: cases = 52/200 (26%) | Those with AKI more likely to have shock, DIC, meningitis and prematurity |
| Hospital mortality: AKI = 70.2% vs no AKI = 25% | ||||||
| Chevalier et al. (1984) | Descriptive observational | 16 infants referred to pediatric nephrology service | none | SCr > 1.5 mg/dl | Hospital mortality = 25% | |
| Non-oliguric renal failure had better outcomes | ||||||
| Norman and Asadi (1979) | Descriptive observational | 72/314 NICU admissions | none | BUN > 20 mg/dl and or UOP < 1 ml/kg per hour | Incidence of AKI 23% | |
| 52/72 responded to fluids | ||||||
| 20/72 had no response to fluids | ||||||
| Mortality: 9/20 (45%) |
The RIFLE criteria and mortality rates for adults with acute kidney injury (adopted with permission from [34]) (95% CI 95% confidence interval)
| Compared AKI levels | No. of studies | Adjusted RR | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Risk vs non-AKI | 13 | 2.4 | 1.94, 2.97 | <0.00001 |
| Injury vs non-AKI | 13 | 4.15 | 3.14, 5.48 | <0.0001 |
| Failure vs non-AKI | 13 | 6.37 | 5.14, 7.90 | <0.0001 |
Fig. 3Box plot distribution showing cystatin C across age groups. The categories 24–28 weeks and 29–36 weeks refer to the gestational age of preterm babies. Preterm babies were 1 day old when the samples were drawn (reproduced with permission [45])
Fig. 4Pattern of urinary IL-18 and NGAL levels after cardiopulmonary bypass. AKI (defined as a > 50% increase in serum creatinine) developed after 48–72 h in the AKI patients (reproduced with permission from [49])