Literature DB >> 24311710

Subacute kidney injury in hospitalized patients.

Tomoko Fujii1, Shigehiko Uchino, Masanori Takinami, Rinaldo Bellomo.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: The epidemiology of AKI and CKD has been described. However, the epidemiology of progressively worsening kidney function (subacute kidney injury [s-AKI]) developing over a longer time frame than defined for AKI (7 days), but shorter than defined for CKD (90 days), is completely unknown. DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: This retrospective study used a hospital laboratory and admission database. Adult patients admitted to a teaching hospital in Tokyo, Japan, between April 1, 2008, and October 31, 2011, were included. s-AKI was classified into three grades of severity (mild, moderate, severe) in accordance with the Risk, Injury, and Failure categories of the Risk, Injury, Failure, Risk, Loss, and ESRD classification, but did not use its time frame. Kidney injury (AKI and s-AKI) occurring during each hospital stay was identified, and logistic regression analysis was performed to assess their effect on hospital mortality.
RESULTS: Of 56,567 patients admitted to the hospital during the study period, 49,518 were included. Of these, 87.8% had no evidence of kidney dysfunction, 11.0% had AKI, and 1.1% had s-AKI. Patients with s-AKI had mild renal dysfunction in 82.7% of cases, moderate in 12.1%, and severe in 5.0%. Worsening s-AKI category was linearly correlated with hospital mortality, as previously described for AKI (no injury: 1.2%, mild: 6.5%, moderate: 12.9%, severe: 20.7%). Although mortality (8.0% versus 17.5%) and need for renal replacement therapy (0.2% versus 2.2%) were lower in patients with s-AKI than in those with AKI, multivariable regression analysis confirmed that s-AKI was an independent risk factor for hospital mortality (odds ratio (OR), 5.44; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 3.89 to 7.44); the OR with AKI was 14.8 (95% CI, 13.2 to 16.7).
CONCLUSIONS: Close to 1% of hospitalized patients develop s-AKI. This condition is independently associated with increased hospital mortality, and the risk for death increases with s-AKI severity. Patients with s-AKI had a better outcome and were less likely to require renal replacement therapy than patients with AKI.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24311710      PMCID: PMC3944755          DOI: 10.2215/CJN.04120413

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin J Am Soc Nephrol        ISSN: 1555-9041            Impact factor:   8.237


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