| Literature DB >> 32723383 |
Patrick Bidulka1, Edouard L Fu2, Clémence Leyrat3, Fotini Kalogirou4, Katherine S L McAllister3, Edward J Kingdon5, Kathryn E Mansfield3, Masao Iwagami6, Liam Smeeth3, Catherine M Clase7, Krishnan Bhaskaran3, Merel van Diepen2, Juan-Jesus Carrero8, Dorothea Nitsch3, Laurie A Tomlinson3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The safety of restarting angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEI) or angiotensin II receptor blockers (ARB) after acute kidney injury (AKI) is unclear. There is concern that previous users do not restart ACEI/ARB despite ongoing indications. We sought to determine the risk of adverse events after an episode of AKI, comparing prior ACEI/ARB users who stop treatment to those who continue.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB); Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor (ACEI); Heart failure
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32723383 PMCID: PMC7389346 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-020-01659-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Flow diagram for study participant identification
Baseline characteristics of the English and Swedish cohorts included in the heart failure (primary outcome) analysis
| English cohort | Swedish cohort | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Continued ACEI/ARB | Stopped ACEI/ARB | Continued ACEI/ARB | Stopped ACEI/ARB | |
| 77 (11) | 77 (11) | 75 (12) | 75 (12) | |
| 18–69 | 756 (23) | 914 (23) | 179 (32) | 393 (32) |
| 70–74 | 386 (12) | 482 (12) | 73 (13) | 162 (13) |
| 75–79 | 609 (19) | 731 (18) | 80 (14) | 161 (13) |
| 80–84 | 672 (20) | 827 (21) | 94 (17) | 214 (17) |
| 85–89 | 552 (17) | 655 (16) | 85 (15) | 201 (16) |
| ≥ 90 | 325 (10) | 394 (10) | 44 (8) | 104 (8) |
| 1569 (48) | 1862 (47) | 255 (46) | 550 (45) | |
| 55 (21) | 53 (22) | 53 (23) | 55 (24) | |
| No known CKD | 388 (12) | 487 (12) | 25 (5) | 102 (8) |
| G1-No CKD | 202 (6) | 214 (5) | 38 (7) | 106 (9) |
| G2-Mild | 894 (27) | 999 (25) | 164 (30) | 357 (29) |
| G3a-Mild-Mod | 726 (22) | 838 (21) | 118 (21) | 237 (19) |
| G3b-Mod-Severe | 775 (24) | 911 (23) | 112 (20) | 242 (20) |
| G4-Severe | 297 (9) | 504 (13) | 83 (15) | 153 (12) |
| G5-Kidney failure | 18 (1) | 50 (1) | 15 (3) | 38 (3) |
| Arrhythmia | 1069 (32) | 1180 (30) | 233 (42) | 452 (37) |
| Diabetes | 1596 (48) | 1824 (46) | 259 (47) | 507 (41) |
| Heart failure | 1067 (32) | 1146 (29) | 285 (51) | 563 (46) |
| Hypertension | 2869 (87) | 3470 (87) | 472 (85) | 1078 (87) |
| IHD | 1770 (54) | 1981 (50) | 213 (38) | 445 (36) |
| Beta blocker | 1453 (44) | 1643 (41) | 389 (70) | 825 (67) |
| CCB | 1152 (35) | 1458 (36) | 205 (37) | 452 (37) |
| Loop diuretic | 1942 (59) | 2273 (57) | 168 (30) | 331 (27) |
| Spironolactone | 416 (13) | 432 (11) | 144 (26) | 279 (23) |
| White | 3058 (93) | 3812 (95) | ||
| Black | 59 (2) | 45 (1) | ||
| Asian | 119 (4) | 85 (2) | ||
| Other | 35 (1) | 26 (1) | ||
| Missing | 29 (1) | 35 (1) | ||
| Non-smoker | 986 (30) | 1211 (30) | ||
| Ex-smoker | 1923 (58) | 2360 (59) | ||
| Current smoker | 378 (12) | 425 (11) | ||
| Missing | 13 (< 1) | 7 (< 1) | ||
| Non-drinker | 389 (12) | 433 (11) | ||
| Current drinker | 2133 (65) | 2683 (67) | ||
| Ex-drinker | 611 (19) | 713 (18) | ||
| Missing | 167 (5) | 174 (4) | ||
| 29 (7) | 29 (7) | |||
| BMI < 18.5 | 84 (3) | 83 (2) | ||
| BMI 18.5–24.9 | 770 (23) | 1019 (25) | ||
| BMI 25–29.9 | 1061 (32) | 1278 (32) | ||
| BMI ≥ 30 | 1265 (38) | 1484 (37) | ||
| Missing | 120 (4) | 139 (4) | ||
| 71 (2) | 190 (5) | |||
Data are n (%) unless otherwise specified. BMI, alcohol use, smoking, and ethnicity were not available in the Swedish dataset
SD standard deviation, CKD chronic kidney disease, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, eGFR category using KDIGO cut-points without the chronicity requirement, mod moderate, IHD ischaemic heart disease, CCB calcium channel blockers, BMI body mass index, AKI acute kidney injury
Fig. 2Forest plot of fully adjusted hazard ratios comparing people who stopped ACEI/ARB after an admission with AKI to those who continued, in English and Swedish cohorts, for each of the outcomes studied. Superscript number 1 indicates English models adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity, smoking, alcohol, BMI, eGFR category, diabetes, arrhythmia, heart failure, hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, beta-blocker, calcium channel blocker, diuretics, and discharge year. Swedish models adjusted for age, sex, eGFR category, diabetes, arrhythmia, heart failure, hypertension, ischaemic heart disease, beta-blocker, calcium channel blocker, diuretics, spironolactone, and discharge year