| Literature DB >> 29423195 |
Jochen G Raimann1, Miguel C Riella2, Nathan W Levin1.
Abstract
In developing countries with limited medical infrastructure, preservation and recovery of renal function following acute kidney injury (AKI) is difficult. In conjunction with clinical presentation, rapid measurement of renal function is essential for early diagnosis and management. Especially in low- and middle-income countries, simple interventions such as hydration and avoidance of toxins have the highest probability of recovery. In such contexts, measurement of urine volume and osmolality and serum creatinine with point-of-care devices and saliva urea nitrogen dipsticks can be valuable. This review aims to identify currently available methodologies to assist in reaching the ambitious goal of the 0by25 initiative to eliminate all preventable deaths from AKI by 2025.Entities:
Keywords: AKI; biomarkers; blood and saliva urea nitrogen; creatinine; guidelines; intensive care; systematic review
Year: 2017 PMID: 29423195 PMCID: PMC5798075 DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfw134
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Kidney J ISSN: 2048-8505
Practice recommendations of the American Association for Clinical Chemistry and the National Academy for Clinical Biochemistry on the use of point-of-care technology devices
Development and maintenance of a comprehensive quality assurance program, including operator training and competency assessment, quality control, equipment maintenance, reagent storage, periodic correlation of results with a central laboratory and troubleshooting of significant discrepancies or errors. |
An interdisciplinary work group including physicians and laboratory professionals. Close collaboration between the laboratory director and POCT users to monitor testing and to investigate deviations, complaints or incidents is essential. |
Training programs and continuing education of those involved on dissemination of knowledge of recent innovations and limitations in POCT devices and testing. |
Data management as a mechanism to improve the quality of POCT. Concurrent central laboratory creatinine testing of the same samples is recommended for the early stages of program development and conduct of regular quality assurance studies. |
KDIGO: definition and classification of AKI
| AKI stage | Serum creatinine | Urine output |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 1.5–1.9 times baseline | <0.5 mL/kg/h for |
| OR | 6–12 h | |
| ≥0.3 mg/dL (≥26.5 mmol/L) increase | ||
| 2 | 2.0–2.9 times baseline | <0.5 mL/kg/h for |
| ≥12 h | ||
| 3 | 3.0 times baseline | <0.3 mL/kg/h for |
| OR | ≥24 h | |
| Increase in serum creatinine to | OR | |
| ≥4.0 mg/dL (≥353.6 mmol/L) | Anuria for ≥12 h | |
| OR | ||
| Initiation of renal replacement therapy | ||
| OR | ||
| In patients <18 years, decrease in | ||
| eGFR to <35 mL/min/1.73 m2 |
Known or presumed to have occurred during the prior 7 days.
Within the preceding 48 h.
eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate.
Pathophysiological correlates of urine discoloration (based on [20])
| Pink | Hematuria, hemoglobinuria and myoglobinuria; massive uric acid crystalluria |
| Red | Hematuria, hemoglobinuria and myoglobinuria; porphyrinuria and alkaptonuria (turns black on standing) |
| Brown | Hematuria, hemoglobinuria and myoglobinuria; jaundice |
| Black | Hematuria, hemoglobinuria and myoglobinuria |
| White (milky) | Chyluria |
| Velvet | Urinary infection (certain strains of |
POCT devices for serum creatinine
| Device | Manufacturer | Sample type | Sample volume | Consumable | Supply storage temperature | Dimensions (width × length × height); portability and weight | Power | Time to result | Price | Price per test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| i-STAT | Abbott | Whole blood | 65 µL | Cartridge | 6–8 | 7.7 × 23.5 × 7.2 cm; hand- held, 0.7 kg | AC or battery | 2 min | ≈15 000– 20 000 USD | ≈15–20 USD |
| Stat Sensor | Nova Biomedical | Whole blood, capillary blood | 1 µL | Dry strip | 4–8 | 15.3 × 8.3 × 4.6 cm; hand- held, 0.4 kg | AC or battery | 0.5 min | ≈3995 USD | ≈6 USD |
| LabGeo-PT10 Smart Blood Analyzer | Samsung | Whole blood | 70 µL | Cartridge | n/a | 140 × 205 × 206 mm, handheld, 2.0 kg | AC or battery | 7 min | ≈8000 USD | ≈15–20 USD |
| IRMA TRUpoint | ITC | Whole blood, capillary blood | 200 µL or 125 µL in capillary collection kit | Cartridge | 2–8 | 29.2 × 24.1 × 12.7 cm; portable, 2.4 kg | AC or battery | 1 min | ≈8–10 000 USD | ≈10–15 USD |
| Reflotron | Roche | Whole blood, serum, plasma | 30 µL | Dry strip | n/a | 21 × 30 × 35 cm; benchtop but portable, 5 kg | AC, optional battery operation | 2–3 min | ≈6500 USD | ≈4–5 USD |
| Piccolo xpress | Abraxis | Whole blood, serum or plasma | 9 µL | Self-contained multi-analyte reagent disc | 2–8 | 32.4 × 15.2 × 20.3 cm; benchtop, 5 kg | AC or battery | ≈12 min | ≈18 000 USD | ≈20 USD |
| Spotchem EZ | Arkray | Whole blood, serum or plasma | 250 µL | Dry strip | <30 | 33.8 × 20 × 16.3; benchtop; 5.5 kg | AC or battery | 8–15 min | ≈8500 USD | ≈ 6 USD |
Prices are estimates based on research results online at various distributors in the USA and Europe and may vary by region, vendor, etc. These estimates only have the purpose to approximate the costs associated with the purchase and use and are by no means replacing a cost estimate by a vendor.