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Seasonal pattern in elderly hospitalized with acute kidney injury: a retrospective nationwide study in Italy

Authors :
Alfredo De Giorgi
Alda Storari
Pedro Manuel Rodríguez-Muñoz
Rosaria Cappadona
Nicola Lamberti
Fabio Manfredini
Pablo Jesús López-Soto
Roberto Manfredini
Fabio Fabbian
Source :
International Urology and Nephrology. 54:3243-3253
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Purpose Acute kidney injury (AKI) frequently complicates hospitalization and is associated with in-hospital mortality (IHM). It has been reported a seasonal trend in different clinical conditions. The aim of this study was to evaluate the possible relationship between seasons of the year and IHM in elderly hospitalized patients with AKI. Methods We selected all admissions complicated by AKI between 2000 and 2015 recorded in the Italian National Hospital Database. ICD-9-CM code 584.xx identified subjects with age ≥ 65 years and age, sex, comorbidity burden, need of dialysis treatment and IHM were compared in hospitalizations recorded during the four seasons. Moreover, we plotted the AKI observed/expected ratio and percentage of mortality during the study period. Results We evaluated 759,720 AKI hospitalizations (mean age 80.5 ± 7.8 years, 52.2% males). Patients hospitalized with AKI during winter months had higher age, prevalence of dialysis-dependent AKI, and number of deceased patients. In whole population IHM was higher in winter and lower in summer, while the AKI observed/expected ratio demonstrated two peaks, one in summer and one in winter. Logistic regression analysis demonstrated that parameters such as age, autumn, winter, comorbidity burden were positively associated with IHM. Conclusion We conclude that a seasonality exists in AKI, however, relationship between seasons and AKI could vary depending on the aspects considered. Both autumn and winter months are independent risk factors for IHM in patients with AKI regardless of age, sex and comorbidity burden. On the contrary, summer time reduces the risk of death during hospitalizations with AKI.

Details

ISSN :
15732584
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Urology and Nephrology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0fabcb3be26e9cf80249e3bb8cbc6f7c