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Risk of Hospital-Acquired Acute Kidney Injury among Adult Opioid Analgesic Users: A Multicenter Real-World Data Analysis

Authors :
Mingjing Pi
Sheng Nie
Licong Su
Yanqin Li
Yue Cao
Peiyan Gao
Yuxin Lin
yan zha
Yongjun Shi
Hua Li
Jiajun Zhao
Yaozhong Kong
Guisen Li
Ying Hu
Huafeng Liu
Qijun Wan
Chunbo Chen
Bicheng Liu
Qiongqiong Yang
Guobin Su
Yilun Zhou
Jianping Weng
Gang Xu
Hong Xu
Ying Tang
Mengchun Gong
Fan Fan Hou
Xin Xu
Source :
Kidney Diseases (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Karger Publishers, 2023.

Abstract

Introduction: Comprehensive data on the risk of hospital-acquired (HA) acute kidney injury (AKI) among adult users of opioid analgesics are lacking. This study aimed to systematically compare the risk of HA-AKI among the users of various opioid analgesics. Methods: This multicenter, retrospective real-world study analyzed 255265 adult hospitalized patients who received at least one prescription of opioid analgesic during the first 30 days of hospitalization. Primary outcome was the time from the first opioid analgesic prescription to HA-AKI occurrence. 12 subtypes of opioid analgesics were analyzed, including 9 for treating moderate-to-severe pain and 3 for mild-to-moderate pain. We examined the association between the exposure to each subtype of opioid analgesic and the risk of HA-AKI using Cox proportional hazards models, using the most commonly used opioid analgesic as the reference group. Results: As compared to dezocine, the most commonly used opioid analgesic treating moderate-to-severe pain, exposure to morphine, but not the other 7 types of opioid analgesics, was associated with a significantly increased risk of HA-AKI (adjusted hazard ratio 1.56, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.40–1.78). The association was consistent in stratified analyses and in a propensity-matched cohort. There were no significant differences in the risk of HA-AKI among the opioid analgesics users with mild-to-moderate pain after adjusting for confounders. Conclusion: The use of morphine was associated with an increased risk of HA-AKI in adult patients with moderate-to-severe pain. Opioid analgesics other than morphine should be chosen preferentially in adult patients with high risk of HA-AKI when treating moderate-to-severe pain.

Subjects

Subjects :
Internal medicine
RC31-1245

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22969357
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Kidney Diseases
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.661ad8f167a646039c23c398361aa0a2
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000533556