| Literature DB >> 31221200 |
Louis M Guzzi1, Tobias Bergler2, Brian Binnall3, Daniel T Engelman3, Lui Forni4,5, Michael J Germain3, Eric Gluck6, Ivan Göcze2, Michael Joannidis7, Jay L Koyner8, V Seenu Reddy9, Thomas Rimmelé10, Claudio Ronco11, Julien Textoris10,12, Alexander Zarbock13, John A Kellum14,15.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The first FDA-approved test to assess risk for acute kidney injury (AKI), [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7], is clinically available in many parts of the world, including the USA and Europe. We sought to understand how the test is currently being used clinically.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Biomarker technology; Biomarker testing; Clinical guidelines; Critical care; Diagnosis; Expert panel; Insulin-like growth factor binding protein 7; Protocols; Tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31221200 PMCID: PMC6585126 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-019-2504-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Stage-based management of acute kidney injury. Shading of boxes indicates priority of action; solid shading indicates actions that are equally appropriate at all stages whereas graded shading indicates increasing priority as intensity increases. AKI: acute kidney injury; ICU: intensive care unit. Source: Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) Acute Kidney Injury Work Group. KDIGO Clinical Practice Guideline for Acute Kidney Injury. Kidney Inter Suppl 2012, 2(1):1–138
[TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] Protocol* Evaluation of existing clinical protocols: ranked order of actions and avoidances† by risk for AKI
| Actions/avoidances | Actions/avoidances | Actions/avoidances | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low risk (≤ 0.3) | Count | High risk (> 0.3, ≤ 2.0) | Count | Highest risk (> 2) | Count |
| Standard of care | 13 | No NSAIDs/ACE inhibitors/ARBs | 20 | Avoid aminoglycosides | 6 |
| Remove Foley | 11 | Keep/insert Foley | 19 | Renal ultrasound | 5 |
| Daily SCr | 10 | Hourly UO | 19 | Monitor SVV/Cardiac Index/SVO2 Q8–12 | 5 |
| No HD monitoring | 9 | SCr Q8–12 | 19 | Monitor fluid resuscitation | 5 |
| Recheck in 12 h if new insult | 7 | Avoid contrast | 19 | Maintenance fluids | 5 |
| Daily serum BUN | 6 | Consider/do renal consult | 16 | Send urine Na+, urea, creatinine | 4 |
| May use NSAIDs/ACE inhibitors | 6 | Recheck in 8–24 h | 14 | Check IVC compressibility with ultrasound | 4 |
| Diurese if signs of volume overload | 6 | Minimize/avoid nephrotoxins | 13 | Consider/use norepinephrine, epinephrine | 4 |
| SVO2 not monitored | 5 | Consider/use inotropes | 11 | Vasopressors | 4 |
| Mean hourly UO | 4 | Hold Lasix unless pulmonary edema | 11 | Dobutamine/Milrinone | 4 |
| Consider transfer out of ICU | 4 | Adjust medication dosing | 10 | Avoid multiple pressors | 4 |
| Consider/do hemodynamic monitoring | 9 | Sensible fluids | 4 | ||
| Adjust narcotics doses | 9 | Avoid and resolve hypervolemia (> 10% fluid gain) | 4 | ||
| Consider colloids-only approach | 9 | Maintain SBP > 90 | 3 | ||
| Keep MAP > 65–80 | 8 | Keep MAP ± 10% baseline | 3 | ||
| Serum BUN Q12 | 7 | Consider higher transfusion trigger | 3 | ||
| Monitor SVO2 if history of abnormal liver function | 7 | PA catheter | 3 | ||
| IVF expansion | 7 | Avoid piperacillin-tazobactam | 3 | ||
| May use balanced fluid if CVP < 8 and hypovolemic | 7 | Low threshold for inotropes if Cardiac Index < 2, ScvO2 < 70, and/or LA increasing despite adequate MAP and volume expansion | 3 | ||
| Pharmacy consult | 7 | Goal SVV < 14 | 2 | ||
| Urine Na, Cr, Eos ×1 | 6 | Diuretics and fluids to be utilized only after determining fluid status and need with FloTrac, ultrasound, etc. | 2 | ||
| Goal CI > 2.0–2.2 | 6 | Assess fluid responsiveness | 2 | ||
| Avoid vancomycin | 6 |
*25 [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] protocols evaluated. †Actions/avoidances included in ≥ 2 protocols. ACE angiotensin-converting enzyme, AKI acute kidney injury, ARB angiotensin-receptor blocker, BUN blood urea nitrogen, Cr creatinine, CVP central venous pressure, Eos eosinophils, HD hemodialysis, ICU intensive care unit, IVC inferior vena cava, IVF intravenous fluid, MAP mean arterial pressure, Na sodium, NSAID nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, PA pulmonary artery, SBP systolic blood pressure, SCr serum creatinine, SVO venous oxygen saturation, UO urinary output, SVV stroke volume variation
Fig. 2Developing proposed care pathway. A schematic representation of the steps involved before, during, and after the expert panel meetings
Proposed target patient populations for [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] testing
| Tier 1 | |
| • Postoperative cardiovascular surgery | |
| • Shock/Hemodynamically unstable | |
| • Sepsis | |
| • Postoperative major non-cardiovascular surgery | |
| • Cardiac arrest, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation | |
| • Oliguria after acute resuscitation | |
| Tier 2 | |
| • Severe trauma (Injury Severity Score > 15) | |
| • Acute illness/decompensation | |
| • Elevated serum creatinine and no baseline | |
| • Decompensated heart failure | |
| • Acute respiratory distress syndrome/hypoxic respiratory failure | |
| • Burn patients with total body surface area > 30% | |
| • Anyone being seen by a rapid response team | |
| • Solid organ (liver, heart, lung, kidney) transplants | |
| • Receiving any nephrotoxic medications | |
| • Any unplanned intensive care unit admission | |
| • Suspected (impending) stage 2/3 acute kidney injury | |
| • Volume depleted | |
| • End-stage liver disease with early acute kidney injury (± hepatorenal syndrome) | |
| • Post-urologic procedure (e.g., partial / radical nephrectomy or cystectomy) |
Populations are listed in order of priority. Priorities assigned to the top three populations were highest among all participants (scores > 35 out of a possible 48). The second tier was also highly ranked (> 20). The remaining populations received lower priority rankings (10–20)
Fig. 3Protocol for [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] testing. ACEs, angiotensin-converting enzymes; AKI, acute kidney injury; ARBs, angiotensin-receptor blockers; ICU, intensive care unit; NSAIDS, nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; UO, urinary output
Consensus statements for potential actions after positive and negative [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] testing
| Positive test (> 0.3) | Negative test (≤ 0.3) |
|---|---|
• Discontinue all nonessential nephrotoxins (e.g., NSAIDs) • Avoid vancomycin or dose adjust • Goal-directed fluid/diuretic management* | • Standard of care or fast-track • Repeat [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] test if additional exposures occur • Consider diuretics to maintain fluid balance |
• Discontinue all ACE inhibitors and/or ARBs • Maintain close UO monitoring • Review meds with clinical pharmacist • Retain invasive hemodynamic monitoring • Avoid saline | |
• Consult nephrology • Repeat [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] test in 12–24 h • Consult intensive care |
*Includes bedside ultrasound, and functional hemodynamic monitoring
Actions are listed in order of priority. High priority (> 30 out of a possible 48) was assigned to the top 5 actions. Actions that received a score < 12 (equivalent to low priority by all participants and more than 25% of participants not supporting at all) were removed from the list