| Literature DB >> 29188454 |
Lynne Sykes1,2, Rob Nipah3,4, Philip Kalra4,5, Darren Green3,4,5.
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is independently associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and is thus an important challenge facing physicians in modern healthcare. This narrative review assesses the impact of strategies employed to tackle AKI following the 2009 NCEPOD report on acute kidney injury (Sterwart et al. Acute kidney injury: adding insult to injury, pp 1-22, 2009). There is scarce and heterogeneous research into hard end points such as mortality and AKI progression for AKI interventions. This review found that e-alerts have varying effects on mortality and AKI progression, but decrease the incidence of contrast-induced AKI. The use of AKI bundles delivers statistically significant improvements in mortality and AKI progression. Similarly, AKI nurses generate statistically significant improvements on hospital acquired AKI and mortality. As yet there is no evidence base for the effects of education, sick day rules and smart phone apps. Overall, a combination of e-alerts and AKI bundles supported by education yielded the most effective and statistically significant results. Current practice revolves around reactive rather than preventative behaviour. This narrative review discusses reactive interventions and their impact on the progression and severity of AKI, and on mortality from it. Preventative behaviour, such as risk stratification and early intervention in the deteriorating patient, may be influential in decreasing AKI incidence.Entities:
Keywords: AKI bundle; AKI nurses; Acute kidney injury; E-alerts; Review of impact; Sick day rules
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29188454 PMCID: PMC6061256 DOI: 10.1007/s40620-017-0454-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nephrol ISSN: 1121-8428 Impact factor: 3.902
KDIGO acute kidney injury classification
| AKI | Serum creatinine criteria | Urine output criteria |
|---|---|---|
| Stage 1 | Increase of more than 0.3 mg/dl (≥ 26.4 µmol/l) or increase of 1.5 to twofold from baseline | < 0.5 ml/kg per hour for 6–12 h |
| Stage 2 | Increase two to threefold from baseline | < 0.5 ml/kg per hour for > 12 h |
| Stage 3 | Increase threefold or serum creatinine of more than or equal to 4.0 mg/dl (> 354 µmol/l) or initiation of renal replacement therapy | Less than 0.3 ml/kg per hour or anuria for > 12 h |
Fig. 1CQUIN indicators 2015/2016 for acute kidney injury
Key words used as Boolean operators or in search for articles
| AKI | E-alert | Specialist nurse | AKI bundle | AKI app | Sick day rules | Education |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acute kidney injury | Electronic alert | Nurse | Bundle | Application | Sick day | Education package |
| Acute renal failure | E alert | Outreach | App | Sick day cards | Teaching | |
| Acute renal impairment | Electronic flag | Smartphone | Sick day guidance | |||
| ARF | Alert | Smart phone |
Fig. 2Number of articles meeting the criteria for inclusion by category
Studies showing the effect of e-alerts on outcomes in AKI
| Study | Number of patients | Setting | Outcome | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mortality | ||||
| Colpaert [ | 951 patients (e-alert control group 227; Alert group 616; Post alert control group 236) | ICU | No effect on mortality; mortality p = 0.37 | AKI with DECT phone alert, effect of AKI sniffer disappeared post intervention |
| Thomas [ | 157 pre intervention | Hospital | No effect on mortality at 4 years | Intervention; e-alert. Initial 6% improvement in survival of post intervention group |
| Wilson [ | 1192 usual care | Hospital | No effect on mortality | Intervention; pager alert for AKI with link to website |
| Ebah [ | Number not declared, Quality improvement project; interventional before and after study | Hospital | Trend towards lower mortality 34 per month, vs 38 per month prior to intervention | Care bundle, AKI nurse, education |
| Selby [ | 8411 post alert, CB, education | Hospital | Decreased mortality p = 0.006 | Unadjusted survival at 30 days improved from 76.3 to 80.5% over 6 months |
| Kolhe [ | 1209 pre alert | Hospital | Decreased in-hospital mortality p = 0.046 | Mortality benefit persisted at 30, 60 and median follow up of 134 days for those with CB completed within 24 h of AKI |
| Chandrasekar [ | Quality improvement project interventional study | Hospital | 23.2% reduction in in-hospital mortality | Combined with care bundle, AKI nurse, education |
| AKI progression, creatinine rise or dialysis incidence | ||||
| Colpaert [ | 951 patients | ICU | No effect on AKI progression or dialysis incidence | AKI progression p = 0.09, dialysis incidence 0.68 |
| Wilson [ | 1192 usual care | Hospital | No improvement in AKI progression (p = 0.81) or the incidence of dialysis [Odds ratio 1.25 (95% CI 0.90–1.74); p = 0.18] | AKI progression p = 0.81, dialysis incidence [OR 1.25 (95% CI 0.90–1.74); p = 0.18] |
| Kolhe [ | 1209 pre alert | Hospital | Less AKI progression p = 0.01 | |
| AKI incidence | ||||
| Chandrasekar [ | Quality improvement project interventional study | Hospital | Decrease in AKI 3 | Combined with care bundle, AKI nurse, education |
| Ebah [ | Number not declared, Quality improvement project; interventional before and after study | Hospital | 31% reduction in incidence of AKI (9–6.5% admission incidence) hospital acquired (28% reduction) | Care bundle, AKI nurse, education |
| Cho [ | 258 pre | Hospital | Reduced incidence of Contrast induced-AKI p = 0.02 | More contrast prophylaxis, 55% post vs. 25% pre alert |
OR odds ratio, CB care bundle, CI-AKI contrast induced AKI
Fig. 3The International Healthcare Institute (IHI) definition of a ‘care bundle’ [45]
Studies showing the effect of care bundles on AKI outcomes
(adapted from Selby [43])
| Study | Size/type | Setting | Bundle | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mortality | ||||
| Kolhe et al. [ | 1209 pre CB | Hospital | 6 elements (fluid assessment, urinalysis, diagnose cause of AKI, order investigations, initiate treatment, refer) | Lower mortality p = 0.045, lower progression of AKI 1–2/3 p = 0.02 |
| Ebah [ | Quality improvement project; interventional before and after study | Hospital pilot 1 ward, scale up 4 wards then hospital wide | 10 point Priority care checklist (baseline, cause, fluid assessment, cause and investigations, catheter, USS, renal referral, fluid balance, urine dip, drug review) | Trend towards lower mortality 34 per month, vs 38 per month prior to intervention |
| Chandrasekar [ | Quality improvement project interventional study | Hospital | ABCDE-IT (Acute complications, Blood pressure, Catheterise, Drugs, Exclude obstruction, Investigations, Treat cause) | 23.2% reduction in in-hospital mortality |
| Kolhe et al. [ | 3518 (939 with CB, 1823 without) | Hospital | 6 elements (fluid assessment, urinalysis, diagnose cause of AKI, order investigations, initiate treatment, refer) | Lower mortality (20.4 vs. 24.4%, p = 0.017) |
| AKI progression, creatinine rise or dialysis incidence | ||||
| Tsui et al. [ | 55 patients pre and 53 post CB | Hospital | 11 elements (baseline creatinine, fluid status, urinalysis, med review × 2, u PCR, urine output, renal USS, referral × 3) | Reduction in RRT in ICU 1.8–0% |
| Kolhe et al. [ | 3518 (939 with CB, 1823 without) | Hospital | 6 elements (fluid assessment, urinalysis, diagnose cause of AKI, order investigations, initiate treatment, refer) | Less AKI progression (4.2 vs. 6.7%, p = 0.02) |
| Chandrasekar [ | Quality improvement project interventional study | Hospital | ABCDE-IT (Acute complications, Blood pressure, Catheterise, Drugs, Exclude obstruction, Investigations, Treat cause) | Weak inverse correlation of AKI incidence (R2 0.351), decrease in AKI 3 and decrease length of stay (2.6 days) |
OR odds ratio, CB care bundle, u PCR urine protein: creatinine ratio, RRT renal replacement therapy
Studies showing the effect of AKI nurses and AKI outreach teams on AKI outcomes
| Author | Intervention | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Thomas [ | Outreach service | More recommendations made, initial 6% improvement in mortality, no statistical improvements long term |
| Hill [ | AKI/outreach team-review AKI 2/3 and EWS scores > 5 | Less AKI progression, 18% reduction in median hospital mortality |
| CMFT MAKIT [ | AKI nurses, e-alerts, education | Decrease hospital acquired AKI (−1%), decrease mortality (−10%) |
| Gulliford [ | AKI nurse, education, AKI champions, telephone follow up | Less AKI 3, decreased mortality |
| Chandrasekar [ | Outreach team/AKI nurse, care bundle, e-alerts, education | Weak inverse correlation of AKI incidence (R2 0.351), decrease in AKI 3 and decrease length of stay (2.6 days) |
| Ebah [ | AKI nurses, e-alerts, education, care bundle | Decrease in AKI incidence (9–6.5%), decreased length of stay (22.1–17 days), trend towards improvement in mortality |