| Literature DB >> 28395664 |
William R Clark1, Mauro Neri2, Francesco Garzotto2, Zaccaria Ricci3, Stuart L Goldstein4, Xiaoqiang Ding5,6, Jiarui Xu5,6, Claudio Ronco2,7.
Abstract
Since its inception four decades ago, both the clinical and technologic aspects of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) have evolved substantially. Devices now specifically designed for critically ill patients with acute kidney injury are widely available and the clinical challenges associated with treating this complex patient population continue to be addressed. However, several important questions remain unanswered, leaving doubts in the minds of many clinicians about therapy prescription/delivery and patient management. Specifically, questions surrounding therapy dosing, timing of initiation and termination, fluid management, anticoagulation, drug dosing, and data analytics may lead to inconsistent delivery of CRRT and even reluctance to prescribe it. In this review, we discuss current limitations of CRRT and potential solutions over the next decade from both a patient management and a technology perspective. We also address the issue of sustainability for CRRT and related therapies beyond 2027 and raise several points for consideration.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28395664 PMCID: PMC5387317 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-017-1665-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Proposed elements for CRRT pharmacokinetic assessment
| • Estimation of pharmacokinetic parameters, including variability | |
| • Comparison of pharmacokinetic parameters with those of typical patients with normal kidney function (literature or sponsor data) or the appropriate reference population | |
| • Quantification of the impact of changes in the prescribed | |
| • Assessment of whether dosage adjustment is warranted in CRRT recipients | |
| • If dosage adjustment is warranted, derivation of specific dosing recommendations for the studied conditions |
Reprinted with permission from [45]
CRRT continuous renal replacement therapy
Q - effluent rate (ml/hr)
Proposed quality metrics for CRRT
| Theme | Measures |
|---|---|
| Dose prescription | High vs low dose |
| Dose delivery | Percentage of prescribed dose delivered |
| Anticoagulation selection | Heparin vs citrate vs none |
| Anticoagulation monitoring | PTT monitoring, citrate monitoring |
| Anticoagulation complications | Bleeding, hypocalcemia, incidence of HIT |
| Treatment interruption | Number of interruptions and duration of interruptions; time to establish new circuit |
| Catheter-related issues | Infections, bleeding, obstruction/thrombosis |
| Circuit-related issues | Hiter clotting, pressure alarming |
Reprinted with permission from [8]
CRRT continuous renal replacement therapy, PTT partial thromboplastin time, HIT heparin-induced thrombocytopenia
Fig. 1Various approaches for biofeedback in CRRT. Reprinted with permission from [52]. CRRT continuous renal replacement therapy
Fig. 2Components of extracorporeal multiorgan support