Literature DB >> 28483379

The incidence of pediatric acute kidney injury is increased when identified by a change in a creatinine-based electronic alert.

Jennifer Holmes1, Gethin Roberts2, Kate May1, Kay Tyerman3, John Geen4, John D Williams5, Aled O Phillips6.   

Abstract

A prospective national cohort study was undertaken to collect data on all cases of pediatric (under 18 yrs of age) acute kidney injury (AKI) identified by a biochemistry-based electronic alert using the Welsh National electronic AKI reporting system. Herein we describe the utility and limitation of using this modification of the KDIGO creatinine-based system data set to characterize pediatric AKI. Of 1,343 incident episodes over a 30-month period, 34.5% occurred in neonates of which 83.8% were AKI stage 1. Neonatal 30-day mortality was 4.1%, with 73.3% of this being accounted for by patients treated in an Intensive Care Unit. In the non-neonatal group, 76.1% were AKI stage 1. Hospital-acquired AKI accounted for 40.1% of episodes while community-acquired AKI represented 29.4% of cases within which 33.9% were admitted to hospital and 30.5% of cases were unclassified. Non-neonatal 30-day mortality was 1.2%, with half of this accounted for by patients treated in the Intensive Care Unit. Nonrecovery of renal function at 30 days occurred in 28% and was significantly higher in patients not admitted to hospital (45% vs. 20%). The reported incidence of AKI in children was far greater than previously reported in studies reliant on clinical identification of adult AKI or hospital coding data. Mortality was highest in neonates and driven by those in the Intensive Care Unit. Nonrecovery of renal function and persistent renal impairment was more common in non-neonates and was especially high in patients with community-acquired AKI who were not hospitalized.
Copyright © 2017 International Society of Nephrology. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  acute kidney injury; electronic alert; pediatric nephrology

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28483379     DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2017.03.009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Kidney Int        ISSN: 0085-2538            Impact factor:   10.612


  9 in total

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2.  Comparison of diagnostic criteria for acute kidney injury in critically ill children: a multicenter cohort study.

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3.  Using electronic AKI alerts to define the epidemiology of acute kidney injury in renal transplants.

Authors:  Aled Jones; Jennifer Holmes; Michael Stephens; John Geen; John Williams; Kieron Donovan; Aled O Phillips
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4.  Acute Kidney Injury, Age, and Socioeconomic Deprivation: Evaluation of a National Data Set.

Authors:  Jennifer Holmes; Dafydd Phillips; Kieron Donovan; John Geen; John D Williams; Aled O Phillips
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5.  Paediatric acute kidney injury hospital admissions in England 1997-2014: burden and risk factors.

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Review 7.  For Whom the Bell Tolls: Acute Kidney Injury and Electronic Alerts for the Pediatric Nephrologist.

Authors:  Elizabeth D Nguyen; Shina Menon
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9.  Lower albumin level and longer disease duration are risk factors of acute kidney injury in hospitalized children with nephrotic syndrome.

Authors:  Eun Mi Yang; Kee Hwan Yoo; Yo Han Ahn; Seong Heon Kim; Jung Won Lee; Woo Yeong Chung; Min Hyun Cho; Kee Hyuck Kim; Heeyeon Cho; Mee Jeong Lee; Jin-Soon Suh; Hye Sun Hyun; Jiwon M Lee; Myung Hyun Cho; Ji Hyun Kim; Il-Soo Ha; Hae Il Cheong; Hee Gyung Kang
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  9 in total

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