1. Incidence and Outcome of Subclinical Acute Kidney Injury Using penKid in Critically Ill Patients.
- Author
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Dépret, François, Hollinger, Alexa, Cariou, Alain, Deye, Nicolas, Vieillard-Baron, Antoine, Fournier, Marie-Céline, Jaber, Samir, Damoisel, Charles, Qin Lu, Monnet, Xavier, Rennuit, Isabelle, Darmon, Michael, Leone, Marc, Guidet, Bertrand, Sonneville, Romain, Montravers, Philippe, Pili-Floury, Sébastien, Lefrant, Jean-Yves, Duranteau, Jacques, and Laterre, Pierre-François
- Subjects
KIDNEY injuries ,CREATININE ,CRITICALLY ill ,BIOMARKERS ,KIDNEY diseases ,PROTEIN precursors ,DISEASE incidence ,CATASTROPHIC illness ,ENKEPHALINS ,DECISION making ,ACUTE kidney failure ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Rationale: Subclinical acute kidney injury (sub-AKI) refers to patients with low serum creatinine but elevated alternative biomarkers of AKI. Its incidence and outcome in critically ill patients remain, however, largely unknown. Plasma proenkephalin A 119-159 (penKid) has been proposed as a sensitive biomarker of glomerular function.Objectives: In this ancillary study of two cohorts, we explored the incidence and outcome of sub-AKI based on penKid.Methods: A prospective observational study in ICUs was conducted. FROG-ICU (French and European Outcome Registry in ICUs) enrolled 2,087 critically ill patients, and AdrenOSS-1 (Adrenomedullin and Outcome in Severe Sepsis and Septic Shock-1) enrolled 583 septic patients. The primary endpoint was 28-day mortality after ICU admission. Sub-AKI was defined by an admission penKid concentration above the normal range (i.e., >80 pmol/L) in patients not meeting the definition of AKI. A sensitivity analysis was performed among patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate above 60 ml/min/1.73 m2 at ICU admission.Measurements and Main Results: In total, 6.1% (122/2,004) and 6.7% (39/583) of patients from the FROG-ICU and AdrenOSS-1 cohorts met the definition of sub-AKI (11.6% and 17.5% of patients without AKI). In patients without AKI or with high estimated glomerular filtration rate, penKid was associated with higher mortality (adjusted standardized hazard ratio [HR], 1.4 [95% confidence interval, 1.1-1.8]; P = 0.010; and HR, 1.6 [95% confidence interval, 1.3-1.8]; P < 0.0001, respectively) after adjustment for age, sex, comorbidities, diagnosis, creatinine, diuresis, and study. Patients with sub-AKI had higher mortality compared with no AKI (HR, 2.4 [95% confidence interval, 1.5-3.7] in FROG-ICU and 2.5 [95% confidence interval, 1.1-5.9] in AdrenOSS-1).Conclusions: Sub-AKI defined using penKid occurred in 11.6-17.5% of patients without AKI and was associated with a risk of death close to patients with AKI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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