4 results on '"Kelevina, Tatiana"'
Search Results
2. Epidemiology and outcomes of early versus late septic acute kidney injury in critically ill patients: A retrospective cohort study.
- Author
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Monard C, Bianchi N, Kelevina T, Altarelli M, and Schneider A
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Retrospective Studies, Intensive Care Units, Critical Illness epidemiology, Acute Kidney Injury epidemiology, Acute Kidney Injury etiology, Acute Kidney Injury therapy, Sepsis complications, Sepsis epidemiology, Sepsis therapy
- Abstract
Background: It was recently proposed to distinguish early from late sepsis-associated acute kidney injury (SA-AKI). We aimed to determine the relative frequency of these entities in critically ill patients and to describe their characteristics and outcomes., Methods: We included in this retrospective cohort study all adult patients admitted for sepsis in a tertiary ICU between 2010 and 2020. We excluded those on chronic dialysis or without consent. We extracted serum creatinine, hourly urinary output, and clinical and socio-demographic data from medical records until day 7 or ICU discharge. AKI presence and characteristics were assessed daily using KDIGO criteria. We compared patients with early (occurring within 2 days of admission) or late (occurring between day 2 and day 7) SA-AKI. We conducted sensitivity analyses using different definitions for early/late SA-AKI., Results: Among 1835 patients, 1660 (90%) fulfilled SA-AKI criteria. Of those, 1610 (97%) had early SA-AKI, and 50 (3%) had late SA-AKI. Similar proportions were observed when only considering AKI with elevated sCr (71% vs. 3%), severe AKI (67% vs. 6%), or different time windows for early SA-AKI. Compared with early SA-AKI patients, those with late SA-AKI were younger (median age [IQR] 59 [49-70] vs. 69 [58-76] years, p < 0.001), had lower Charlson comorbidity index (3 [1-5] vs. 5 [3-7], p < 0.001) and lower SAPSII scores (41 [34-50] vs. 53 [43-64], p < 0.001). They had similar (24% vs. 26%, p = 0.75) in-hospital mortality., Conclusions: AKI is almost ubiquitous in septic critically ill patients and present within two days of admission. The timing from ICU admission might not be relevant to distinguish different phenotypes of SA-AKI., Ethics Approval: Ethics Committee Vaud, Lausanne, Switzerland (n°2017-00008)., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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3. Identification of an optimal threshold to define oliguria in critically ill patients: an observational study.
- Author
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Bianchi NA, Altarelli M, Monard C, Kelevina T, Chaouch A, and Schneider AG
- Subjects
- Adult, Humans, Cohort Studies, Oliguria, Intensive Care Units, Retrospective Studies, Critical Illness, Acute Kidney Injury epidemiology
- Abstract
Background: The relevance of current consensus threshold to define oliguria has been challenged by small observational studies. We aimed to determine the optimal threshold to define oliguria in critically-ill patients., Methods: Cohort study including adult patients admitted within a multi-disciplinary intensive care unit between January 1st 2010 and June 15th 2020. Patients on chronic dialysis or who declined consent were excluded. We extracted hourly urinary output (UO) measurements along with patient's characteristics from electronic medical records and 90-day mortality from the Swiss national death registry. We randomly split our data into a training (80%) and a validation (20%) set. In the training set, we developed multivariable models to assess the relationship between 90-day mortality and the minimum average UO calculated over time windows of 3, 6, 12 and 24 h. Optimal thresholds were determined by visually identifying cut-off values for the minimum average UO below which predicted mortality increased substantially. We tested models' discrimination and calibration on the entire validation set as well as on a subset of patients with oliguria according to proposed thresholds., Results: Among the 15,500 patients included in this analysis (training set: 12,440, validation set: 3110), 73.0% (95% CI [72.3-73.8]) presented an episode of oliguria as defined by consensus criteria (UO < 0.5 ml/kg/h for 6 h). Our models had excellent (AUC > 85% for all time windows) discrimination and calibration. The relationship between minimum average UO and predicted 90-day mortality was nonlinear with an inflexion point at 0.2 ml/kg/h for 3 and 6 h windows and 0.3 ml/kg/h for 12 and 24 h windows. Considering a threshold of < 0.2 ml/kg/h over 6 h, the proportion of patients with an episode of oliguria decreased substantially to 24.7% (95% CI [24.0-25.4]). Contrary to consensus definition, this threshold identified a population with a higher predicted 90-day mortality., Conclusions: The widely used cut-off for oliguria of 0.5 ml/kg/h over 6 h may be too conservative. A cut-off of 0.2 ml/kg/h over 3 or 6 h is supported by the data and should be considered in further definitions of oliguria., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Association of Oliguria With Acute Kidney Injury Diagnosis, Severity Assessment, and Mortality Among Patients With Critical Illness.
- Author
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Bianchi NA, Stavart LL, Altarelli M, Kelevina T, Faouzi M, and Schneider AG
- Subjects
- Cohort Studies, Glomerular Filtration Rate, Humans, Oliguria diagnosis, Retrospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Time Factors, Acute Kidney Injury complications, Acute Kidney Injury diagnosis, Critical Illness, Oliguria etiology, Severity of Illness Index
- Abstract
Importance: The current definition and staging of acute kidney injury (AKI) considers alterations in serum creatinine (sCr) level and urinary output (UO). However, the relevance of oliguria-based criteria is disputed., Objective: To determine the contribution of oliguria, as defined by the Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) criteria, to AKI diagnosis, severity assessment, and short- and long-term outcomes., Design, Setting, and Participants: This cohort study included adult patients admitted to a multidisciplinary intensive care unit from January 1, 2010, to June 15, 2020. Patients receiving long-term dialysis and those who declined consent were excluded. Daily sCr level and hourly UO measurements along with sociodemographic characteristics and severity scores were extracted from electronic medical records. Long-term mortality was assessed by cross-referencing the database with the Swiss national death registry. The onset and severity of AKI according to the KDIGO classification was determined using UO and sCr criteria separately, and their agreement was assessed., Main Outcomes and Measures: Using a multivariable model accounting for baseline characteristics, severity scores, and sCr stages, the association of UO criteria with 90-day mortality was evaluated. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to assess how missing sCr, body weight, and UO values, as well as different sCr baseline definitions and imputations methods, would affect the main results., Results: Among the 15 620 patients included in the study (10 330 men [66.1%] with a median age of 65 [IQR, 53-75] years, a median Simplified Acute Physiology Score II score of 40.0 [IQR, 30.0-53.0], and a median follow-up of 67.0 [IQR, 34.0-100.0] months), 12 143 (77.7%) fulfilled AKI criteria. Serum creatinine and UO criteria had poor agreement on AKI diagnosis and staging (Cohen weighted κ, 0.36; 95% CI, 0.35-0.37; P < .001). Compared with the isolated use of sCr criteria, consideration of UO criteria enabled identification of AKI in 5630 patients (36.0%). Those patients had a higher 90-day mortality than patients without AKI (724 of 5608 [12.9%] vs 288 of 3462 [8.3%]; P < .001). On multivariable analysis accounting for sCr stage, comorbidities, and illness severity, UO stages 2 and 3 were associated with a higher 90-day mortality (odds ratios, 2.4 [95% CI, 1.6-3.8; P < .001] and 6.2 [95% CI, 3.7-10.5; P < .001], respectively). These results remained significant in all sensitivity analyses., Conclusions and Relevance: The findings of this cohort study suggest that oliguria lasting more than 12 hours (KDIGO stage 2 or 3) has major AKI diagnostic implications and is associated with outcomes irrespective of sCr elevations.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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