4.2 Article

Intraoperative renal hypoxia and risk of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury

Journal

JOURNAL OF CARDIAC SURGERY
Volume 36, Issue 10, Pages 3577-3585

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jocs.15859

Keywords

acute kidney injury; cardiac surgery; cardiopulmonary bypass; erythropoietin; hypoxia; urinary oxygen tension

Funding

  1. Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University
  2. National Heart Foundation of Australia [VG101377]
  3. National Health and Medical Research Council [GNT1122455]

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Intraoperative change in pEPO does not predict AKI, but UPO2 shows promise, particularly in patients with higher risk of operative mortality. The disparity between these two markers of renal hypoxia may indicate that UPO2 reflects medullary oxygenation whereas pEPO reflects cortical oxygenation.
Background Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common after cardiac surgery requiring cardiopulmonary bypass. Renal hypoxia may precede clinically detectable AKI. We compared the efficacy of two indices of renal hypoxia, (i) intraoperative urinary oxygen tension (UPO2) and (ii) the change in plasma erythropoietin (pEPO) during surgery, in predicting AKI. We also investigated whether the performance of these prognostic markers varies with preoperative patient characteristics. Methods In 82 patients undergoing on-pump cardiac surgery, blood samples were taken upon induction of anesthesia and upon entry into the intensive care unit. UPO2 was continuously measured throughout surgery. Results Thirty-two (39%) patients developed postoperative AKI. pEPO increased during surgery, but this increase did not predict AKI, regardless of risk of postoperative mortality assessed by EuroSCORE-II. For patients categorized at higher risk by EuroSCORE-II >1.98 (median score for the cohort), UPO2 <= 10 mmHg at any time during surgery predicted a 4.04-fold excess risk of AKI (p = .04). However, UPO2 did not significantly predict AKI in lower-risk patients. UPO2 significantly predicted AKI in patients who were older, had previous myocardial infarction, diabetes, lower preoperative serum creatinine, or shorter bypass times. pEPO and UPO2 were only weakly correlated. Conclusions Intraoperative change in pEPO does not predict AKI. However, UPO2 shows promise, particularly in patients with higher risk of operative mortality. The disparity between these two markers of renal hypoxia may indicate that UPO2 reflects medullary oxygenation whereas pEPO reflects cortical oxygenation.

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