151. National Trends and Impact of Acute Kidney Injury Requiring Hemodialysis in Hospitalizations With Atrial Fibrillation.
- Author
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Chan L, Mehta S, Chauhan K, Poojary P, Patel S, Pawar S, Patel A, Correa A, Patel S, Garimella PS, Annapureddy N, Agarwal SK, Gidwani U, Coca SG, and Nadkarni GN
- Subjects
- Acute Kidney Injury therapy, Adolescent, Adult, Aged, Comorbidity, Databases, Factual, Female, Hospital Mortality trends, Humans, Liver Failure epidemiology, Logistic Models, Male, Middle Aged, Multivariate Analysis, Odds Ratio, Population Growth, Renal Dialysis, Respiration, Artificial, Respiratory Insufficiency epidemiology, Respiratory Insufficiency therapy, Sepsis epidemiology, United States epidemiology, Young Adult, Acute Kidney Injury epidemiology, Atrial Fibrillation epidemiology, Hospitalization
- Abstract
Background: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is a common cause for hospitalization, but there are limited data regarding acute kidney injury requiring dialysis (AKI-D) in AF hospitalizations. We aimed to assess temporal trends and outcomes in AF hospitalizations complicated by AKI-D utilizing a nationally representative database., Methods and Results: Utilizing the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, AF hospitalizations and AKI-D were identified using diagnostic and procedure codes. Trends were analyzed overall and within subgroups and utilized multivariable logistic regression to generate adjusted odds ratios (aOR) for predictors and outcomes including mortality and adverse discharge. Between 2003 and 2012, 3751 (0.11%) of 3 497 677 AF hospitalizations were complicated by AKI-D. The trend increased from 0.3/1000 hospitalizations in 2003 to 1.5/1000 hospitalizations in 2012, with higher increases in males and black patients. Temporal changes in demographics and comorbidities explained a substantial proportion but not the entire trend. Significant comorbidities associated with AKI-D included mechanical ventilation (aOR 13.12; 95% CI 9.88-17.43); sepsis (aOR 8.20; 95% CI 6.00-11.20); and liver failure (aOR 3.72; 95% CI 2.92-4.75). AKI-D was associated with higher risk of in-hospital mortality (aOR 3.54; 95% CI 2.81-4.47) and adverse discharge (aOR 4.01; 95% CI 3.12-5.17). Although percentage mortality within AKI-D decreased over the decade, attributable risk percentage mortality remained stable., Conclusions: AF hospitalizations complicated by AKI-D have quintupled over the last decade with differential increase by demographic groups. AKI-D is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Without effective AKI-D therapies, focus should be on early risk stratification and prevention to avoid this devastating complication., (© 2016 The Authors. Published on behalf of the American Heart Association, Inc., by Wiley Blackwell.)
- Published
- 2016
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