| Literature DB >> 28329026 |
Yan-Mei Feng1, Yuan Yang2, Xiao-Li Han1, Fan Zhang3, Dong Wan4, Rui Guo4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The optimal timing for initiating renal replacement therapy (RRT) in patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) remains controversial.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28329026 PMCID: PMC5362192 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0174158
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Study selection of RCTs for the meta-analysis.
Characteristics of studies included in the meta-analysis.
| Study | Year | Study Design | Country | Patient Type | RRT Type | Patients Num | Early RRT Criteria | Primary Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bouman | 2002 | 1. RCT | Netherlands | Ventilated severely ill patients | CVVH | 106 | 1. TIME | 1. 28 d Mortality: negative |
| Durmaz | 2003 | 1. RCT | Turkey | Cardiac surgery | CVVHD | 44 | 1. BIOCHEM | 1. Hospital mortality: positive |
| Sugahara | 2004 | 1. RCT | Japan | Cardiac surgery | CVVHD | 28 | 1. BIOCHEM | 1. 14 d Mortality: positive |
| Payen | 2009 | 1. RCT | France | Severe sepsis or septic shock | CVVH | 76 | 1. TIME | 1. 14 d Mortality: negative |
| Jamale | 2010 | 1. RCT | India | AKI | IHD | 208 | 1. BIOCHEM | 1. Hospital mortality: negative |
| Combes | 2015 | 1. RCT | USA | Cardiac surgery | Mix | 224 | 1. TIME | 1. 30 d Mortality: negative |
| Wald | 2015 | 1. RCT | Canada | Critically ill patients with severe AKI | Mix | 100 | 1. TIME | 1. 90 d Mortality: negative |
| Gaudry | 2016 | 1. RCT | France | Critically ill patients with KIDGO 3 AKI | Mix | 619 | 1. TIME | 1. 60 d Mortality: negative |
| Zarbock | 2016 | 1. RCT | German | Critically ill patients with KIDGO 2 AKI | CVVHDF | 231 | 1. TIME | 1. 90 d Mortality: positive |
AKI, Acute kidey injury; KIDGO, Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes; CVVH, Continuous veno-venous hemofiltration; CVVHD, Continuous veno-venous hemodialysis; IHD, intermittent haemodialysis; CVVHDF, Continuous veno-venous hemodiafiltration; EHV, Early high volume; ELV, Early low volume; LLV, Late low volume.
Fig 2A. Forest plot of mortality in patients with AKI regarding early versus late initiating of RRT. Assessment for risk of bias. green = low risk of bias; yellow = uncertain risk of bias; red = high risk of bias. B. Sensitivity analysis of primary outcome of mortality. Single trial was excluded each time, however, pooled estimate and 95% CI had no significant changes. C. TSA on mortality in patients with AKI receiving early versus late initiating of RRT, which showed that the cumulative Z-curve did not cross either the conventional boundary for benefit or the trial sequential monitoring boundary for benefit. Therefore, it established insufficient and inconclusive evidence. The estimated required information size of 5185 patients was calculated using α = 0.05 (two-sided) and, β = 0.20 (power 80%), an anticipated relative risk reduction of 18%, and an event proportion of 41.4% in the late RRT group.
Fig 3A. Forest plot of ICU LOS in patients with AKI regarding early versus late initiating of RRT. B. Sensitivity analysis of secondary outcome of ICU LOS. C. TSA on ICU LOS in patients with AKI receiving early versus late initiating of RRT, which showed that the cumulative Z-curve crossed the conventional boundary for benefit but did not cross the trial sequential monitoring boundary for benefit. Therefore, it established insufficient and inconclusive evidence. The estimated required information size of 6596 patients was calculated using α = 0.05 (two-sided) and β = 0.20 (power 80%), an anticipated estimated mean difference reduction of −1.4, and a heterogeneity correction of 92% in the late RRT group.
Fig 4A. Forest plot of hospital LOS in patients with AKI regarding early versus late initiating of RRT. B. Sensitivity analysis of secondary outcome of hospital LOS. C. TSA on hospital LOS in patients with AKI receiving early versus late initiating of RRT, which showed that the cumulative Z-curve crossed the conventional boundary for benefit but did not cross the trial sequential monitoring boundary for benefit. Therefore, it established insufficient and inconclusive evidence. The estimated required information size of 2874 patients was calculated using α = 0.05 (two-sided) and β = 0.20 (power 80%), an anticipated estimated mean difference reduction of −6.44, and a heterogeneity correction of 96% in the late RRT group.