| Literature DB >> 34837387 |
Omneya A Kandil1, Karam R Motawea1, Edward Darling2, Jeffrey B Riley2, Jaffer Shah3, Mohamed Abdalla Mohamed Elashhat4, Bruce Searles2, Hani Aiash2,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiopulmonary bypass is known to raise the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI). Previous studies have identified numerous risk factors of cardiopulmonary bypass including the possible impact of perioperative ultrafiltration. However, the association between ultrafiltration (UF) and AKI remains conflicting. Thus, we conducted a meta-analysis to further examine the relationship between UF and AKI. HYPOTHESIS: Ultrafiltration during cardiac surgery increases the risk of developping Acute kidney Injury.Entities:
Keywords: acute kidney injury; cardiac surgery; cardiopulmonary bypass; fluid management; ultrafiltration
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34837387 PMCID: PMC8715396 DOI: 10.1002/clc.23750
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Cardiol ISSN: 0160-9289 Impact factor: 2.882
Figure 1PRISMA flow chart
Summary of the included studies
| ID | Study design | Type of filtration | Participants | Volume of filtrate (mean) | Study highlights/conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luciani et al. (2001) | Prospective randomized | MUF | 284 in MUF versus 289 in control | 18 ml/kg (1.3 L/patient) | Most but not all morbid events listed in the miscellaneous group were less common among patients having modified ultrafiltration, including postoperative hemorrhage requiring surgical reexploration, acute renal failure needing dialysis, and gastrointestinal complications. Only the difference in the latter, however, reached statistical significance |
| Raman et al. (2003) | Retrospective study | CUF | 61 patients with hemofiltration during CPB versus 57 patients without hemofiltration | 3400 ml/patient | Renal dysfunction 6 (9.8%) in hemofilter group versus 10 (17.5%) in nonhemofilter group |
| Papadopoulos et al. (2013) | Prospective, randomized trial | N‐MUF | 25 patients underwent N MUF versus 25 patients did not | 3000 ml/patient | No significant differences between the two groups were observed in terms of the incidence of surgical reexploration for bleeding ( |
| Zhang et al. (2009) | Randomized trial | SBUF | 60 patients with SBUF versus 60 patients in control | Not mentioned | Subzero‐balanced ultrafiltration during cardiopulmonary bypass can effectively decrease the patients' hospital morbidity and the volume of blood transfusion: it also may promote early postoperative recovery of patients |
| Kuntz et al. (2006) | Prospective randomized trial | CUF | 49 patients in CUF group versus 47 in control | 5.5 L/patient) | No significant differences in pre‐ or postoperative creatinine values were observed. Aggressive CUF can be safely used during cardiopulmonary bypass in the adult population to reduce fluid accumulation and elevate bypass hematocrit without affecting bypass or intraoperative urine production |
| Babka et al. (1997) | Prospective study | CUF | 30 patients with ultrafiltration versus 30 patients without | 2510 ml/patient | The postoperative profiles of these patients revealed no new myocardial infarctions, stroke, or renal insufficiency in either group |
| Foroughi et al. (2014) | Prospective randomized | Combined | 87 in hemofilter versus 72 in no hemofilter | 3532.65 ml | Routine use of ultrafiltration during cardiac surgery offers no advantages in renal protection and reduction of AKI incidence |
| Musleh et al. (2009) | Prospective randomized | CUF | 40 patients in hemofiltration versus 39 patients without hemofiltration | 15 ml/kg | Use of hemofiltration during CPB was found not to be protective against renal dysfunction ( |
| Matata et al. (2015) | Randomized controlled trial | ZBUF | 97 patients in ZBUF versus 102 in control | 8625 ml/patient | Z‐BUF during bypass surgery is associated with significant reductions in morbidity and biomarkers of CPB‐induced acute kidney injury soon after CPB, which are indicative of clearance of inflammatory/immune mediator from the circulation |
| Paugh et al. (2015) | Retrospective | CUF | 1364 in CUF group versus 5045 in non CUF | 1365 ml/patient | Patients exposed to CUF had a higher adjusted risk of AKI. Clinical teams should consider lower volumes of CUF among patients with low creatinine clearance to minimize the risk of AKI |
| Roscitano et al. (2009) | Retrospective | CUF | 40 underwent CABG with CPB and CVVH versus 44 who had on‐pump CABG without CVVH | Not mentioned | We used CVVH during CPB and found that these patients had better postoperative renal function than those undergoing CABG on CPB without hemofiltration. As reported by others, OPCAB was not related to a deterioration of renal function, but our results showed an advantage of intraoperative CVVH over OPCAB, in terms of renal function |
| El‐Tahan et al. (2010) | A prospective, randomized double‐blinded placebo study | Combined | 30 patients underwent CUF versus 30 underwent CUF and MUF | 3449.8 ml/patient | There were no differences between groups in the frequency of perioperative bleeding (either from the surgical site or hematemesis), coagulopathy, pulmonary, renal, new‐onset or worsening of ascites, encephalopathy, infection, or wound complications |
Abbreviations: AKI, acute kidney injury; CPB, cardiopulmonary bypass; CUF, conventional ultrafiltration; MUF, modified ultrafiltration.
Figure 2Forest plot of UF and AKI for all studies and with one study excluded. (A) Forest plot of UF and AKI for all studies. (B) Forest plot of UF and AKI with one study omitted. AKI, acute kidney injury; UF, ultrafiltration
Figure 3Forest plot of UF and AKI subgroup analysis according to technique and quantity of volume removed. (A) UF and AKI according to technique (B) UF and AKI according to volume removed. AKI, acute kidney injury; UF, ultrafiltration
Figure 4UF and AKI subgroup analysis according to the history of kidney insufficiency or not. AKI, acute kidney injury; UF, ultrafiltration