| Literature DB >> 28372552 |
Linda Awdishu1,2, Ravindra L Mehta3.
Abstract
Drug induced kidney injury is a frequent adverse event which contributes to morbidity and increased healthcare utilization. Our current knowledge of drug induced kidney disease is limited due to varying definitions of kidney injury, incomplete assessment of concurrent risk factors and lack of long term outcome reporting. Electronic surveillance presents a powerful tool to identify susceptible populations, improve recognition of events and provide decision support on preventative strategies or early intervention in the case of injury. Research in the area of biomarkers for detecting kidney injury and genetic predisposition for this adverse event will enhance detection of injury, identify those susceptible to injury and likely mitigate risk. In this review we will present a 6R framework to identify and mange drug induced kidney injury - risk, recognition, response, renal support, rehabilitation and research.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Adverse reaction; Crystalluria; Drugs; Glomerular; Hypersensitivity; Nephrolithiasis; Nephrotoxicity; Tubular toxicity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28372552 PMCID: PMC5379580 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-017-0536-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
5R Summary by Causal Drug
| Drug/Phenotype | Risk | Recognition | Response | Renal support | Rehabilitation | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient specific | Disease specific | Process of care | |||||
| Aminoglycosides [ | Age | Diabetes | Duration of therapy | 12.2% for gentamicin in neonates [ |
| No difference in need for renal support in no gentamicin vs. gentamicin treated infection endocarditis, 8 vs. 6% respectively [ | 4.6% mortality in a cohort of 201 critically ill patients [ |
| Acyclovir | Older children [ | Volume depletion | Rapid intravenous administration | 12-48% crystal nephropathy with rapid intravenous bolus administration |
| ||
| Calcineurin Inhibitors [ | Genetic variations in CYP3A4, MDR1, ACE, TGF-β, and CCR5 [ | 42% in non-renal allografts [ | Reduce dose | ||||
| Cisplatin [ | Age | CKD | Concurrent nephrotoxins | 58% in pediatrics [ | Minimize concurrent nephrotoxin exposure | 49% with reduction in GFR, 71% with glucosuria, 67% with proteinuria over long term [ | |
| Colistin [ | Age | 48% in overweight or obese patients [ | Minimize concurrent nephrotoxin exposure | 80% developed failure by RIFLE category [ | |||
| Ifosfamide [ | Age | CKD | Cumulative dose | 50% in pediatric cancer patients [ | Minimize concurrent nephrotoxin exposure | No dialysis requirement [ | No resolution of injury [ |
| Lithium | CKD | Duration of therapy | 11.6-15% develop AKI [ | Discontinuation of drug | 78% of patients with Scr ≥2.5 mg/dL at baseline required dialysis [ | 42.1% develop ESRD [ | |
| Protease Inhibitors | Asymptomatic crystalluria in 20-67% [ | Prevention: | No dialysis requirements | 21% increased risk of CKD [ | |||
| Proton Pump Inhibitors | Age > 60 years [ | Current users higher risk compared to past users | 8-32 per 100,000 person-years [ | Discontinue drug | No dialysis requirement reported | Spontaneous recovery after drug withdrawal [ | |
| Sulfamethoxazole/trimethoprim | None | DM | Concurrent nephrotoxins | 11-22% experience AKI [ | Discontinue drug | 1% required dialysis | Complete recovery within 30 days |
| Tenofovir | 12-22% with proximal tubular injury [ | Prevention: | <2% require dialysis [ | 16% increased risk of CKD [ | |||
| Vancomycin [ | Age | Sepsis | Trough concentrations > 15 ng/mL | 5-43% [ | Employ therapeutic drug monitoring and pharmacist consultation [ | Dialysis 0–7.1% [ | Resolution 21–72.5% [ |
| VEGF Inhibitors | Dose related [ | 21-63% incidence of hypertension [ | Reduce dose | 33% resolution of injury after discontinuation of therapy [ | |||