| Literature DB >> 31980139 |
Stuart L Goldstein1, Devesh Dahale2, Eric S Kirkendall2, Theresa Mottes2, Heather Kaplan2, Stephen Muething2, David J Askenazi3, Traci Henderson3, Lynn Dill3, Michael J G Somers4, Jessica Kerr4, Jennifer Gilarde4, Joshua Zaritsky5, Valerie Bica5, Patrick D Brophy6, Jason Misurac6, Richard Hackbarth7, Julia Steinke7, Joann Mooney7, Sara Ogrin7, Vimal Chadha8, Bradley Warady8, Richard Ogden8, Wendy Hoebing8, Jordan Symons9, Karyn Yonekawa9, Shina Menon9, Lisa Abrams9, Scott Sutherland10, Patricia Weng11, Fang Zhang12, Kathleen Walsh2.
Abstract
Nephrotoxic medication (NTMx) exposure is a common cause of acute kidney injury (AKI) in hospitalized children. The Nephrotoxic Injury Negated by Just-in time Action (NINJA) program decreased NTMx associated AKI (NTMx-AKI) by 62% at one center. To further test the program, we incorporated NINJA across nine centers with the goal of reducing NTMx exposure and, consequently, AKI rates across these centers. NINJA screens all non-critically ill hospitalized patients for high NTMx exposure (over three medications on the same day or an intravenous aminoglycoside over three consecutive days), and then recommends obtaining a daily serum creatinine level in exposed patients for the duration of, and two days after, exposure ending. Additionally, substitution of equally efficacious but less nephrotoxic medications for exposed patients starting the day of exposure was recommended when possible. The main outcome was AKI as defined by the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) serum creatinine criteria (increase of 50% or 0.3 mg/dl over baseline). The primary outcome measure was AKI episodes per 1000 patient-days. Improvement was defined by statistical process control methodology and confirmed by Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average (ARIMA) modeling. Eight consecutive bi-weekly measure rates in the same direction from the established baseline qualified as special cause change for special process control. We observed a significant and sustained 23.8% decrease in NTMx-AKI rates by statistical process control analysis and by ARIMA modeling; similar to those of the pilot single center. Thus, we have successfully applied the NINJA program to multiple pediatric institutions yielding decreased AKI rates.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; nephrotoxicity; pediatric nephrology
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31980139 DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2019.10.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Kidney Int ISSN: 0085-2538 Impact factor: 10.612