| Literature DB >> 26703329 |
Michael A Gillies1, Vivek Kakar2, Robert J Parker3, Patrick M Honoré4, Marlies Ostermann5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury (AKI) after surgery is associated with increased mortality and healthcare costs. Fenoldopam is a selective dopamine-1 receptor agonist with renoprotective properties. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials comparing fenoldopam with placebo to prevent AKI after major surgery.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26703329 PMCID: PMC4699343 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-015-1166-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Specification of the research question applying a PICO (population, intervention, comparison and outcome) model
| Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adult patients (≥18 years) undergoing any type of major surgery | Treatment with fenoldopam in the peri-operative period | Placebo | Incidence of AKI Requirement for RRT post-operatively Hospital mortality Side effects (hypotension, need for catecholamine treatment) |
AKI acute kidney injury, RRT renal replacement therapy
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram detailing search strategy and identification of studies used in data synthesis. AKI acute kidney injury, RRT renal replacement therapy, mRCT metaRegister of Controlled Trials
Summary of included studies
| Author | Time of study | Type of surgery | Number of patients (F/P) | Age (F/P) | Dose and duration of fenoldopam | Inclusion of CKD patients | Definition of AKI | Reported outcomes | Reported side effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O’Hara et al. [ | Nov 2002 to April 2010 | Partial nephrectomy in patients with single kidney | 77 (43/34) | 59/59 (mean) | 0.1 μg/kg/min for 24 h | Not reported | RIFLE criteria or change in GFR | AKI RRT data provided separately by authors | None reported |
| Ranucci et al. [ | Sept 2008 to March 2009 | Elective cardiac surgery with expected CPB time ≥90 mins | 80 (40/40) | 65/64 (mean) | 0.1 μg/kg/min from pre-operative to 12 h post-opertive | Yes (including 2 patients on chronic dialysis) | Peak Cr >2 mg/dL and 100 % rise from baseline for >24 h | AKI 30-day mortality | Stroke, mechanical ventilation, sternal wound infection, re-exploration |
| Barr et al. [ | May 2002 to Jan 2006 | Elective or emergency cardiac surgery in patients with pre-operative CrCl ≤40 ml/min | 38 (19/19) | 77.2/72.4 (mean) | 0.1 μg/kg/min for 48 h | Yes (CKD was an inclusion criterion) | Difference in CrCl as per Cockcroft-Gault formula between pre-operative and post-operative day 3 | CrCl RRT Hospital mortality | Use of vasopressors and inotropes |
| Cogliati et al. [ | Not reported | High-risk cardiac surgery | 193 (95/98) | 70.3/69.6 (mean) | 0.1 μg/kg/min started before surgical incision until 24 h post-operative | Yes | Serum Cr rise to >2 mg/dl with a rise of ≥0.7 mg/dl from pre-operative to post-operative | AKI RRT | None reported |
| Biancofiore et al. [ | Jan 2001 to July 2003 | Liver transplant surgery | 92 (46/46) | 45/51 (median) | 0.1 μg/kg/min from induction until 96 h post-operative | Yes (provided pre-operative Cr ≤1.5 mg/dL) | Serum Cr rise to >1.5 mg/dl or doubling of Cr or need for RRT | AKI RRT Hospital mortality | None reported |
| Halpenny et al. [ | Not reported | Elective aortic surgery with infra-renal cross-clamping | 27 (14/13) | 70/69 (mean) | 0.1 μg/kg/min from surgical incision until release of aortic cross-clamp | No | Not specifically defined | AKI | Blood loss, MAP and heart rate |
AKI acute kidney injury, CKD chronic kidney disease, CPB cardiopulmonary bypass, Cr creatinine, CrCl creatinine clearance, F Fenoldopam, GFR glomerular filtration rate, MAP mean arterial blood pressure, P placebo, RIFLE Risk–Injury–Failure–Loss–End-stage renal disease, RRT renal replacement therapy
Quality summary: authors’ assessment of risk of bias in randomised controlled trials included in meta-analysis
| Author | Random sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Blinding of participants, personnel and outcome assessors | Incomplete outcome data | Selective outcome reporting | Commercial involvement | Other sources of bias | Overall assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| O’Hara et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk |
| Ranucci et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | High riska | High risk |
| Barr et al. [ | Unclear | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low riska | High risk |
| Cogliati et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear | High riska | High risk |
| Biancofiore et al. [ | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | High riska | High risk |
| Halpenny et al. [ | Unclear | Unclear | Low risk | Low risk | Low risk | Unclear | High riskb | High risk |
Risk of bias was judged by the authors to be high, unclear or low according to the Cochrane Collaboration’s risk of bias assessment tool
aHigh risk due to potential imbalance in number of patients with pre-existing chronic kidney disease
bHigh risk because the definition of AKI was not provided
Fig. 2Forest plot of incidence of new acute kidney injury (as defined by authors). CI confidence interval, M-H Mantel-Haenszel
Fig. 3Forest plot for hospital mortality. CI confidence interval, M-H Mantel-Haenszel