4.6 Article

Major Bleeding of Transjugular Native Kidney Biopsies. A French Nationwide Cohort Study

Journal

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL REPORTS
Volume 6, Issue 10, Pages 2594-2603

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ekir.2021.07.011

Keywords

bleeding score; epidemiology; kidney biopsy; percutaneous; transjugular

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Transjugular kidney biopsies have lower risk of bleeding compared to percutaneous route, especially in high-risk patients identified by risk scores. Severe bleeding is associated with increased risk of death for both routes. Transjugular route is more commonly used in certain high-risk patients.
Introduction: The risk of bleeding associated with transjugular kidney biopsies is unclear, and which patients are the best candidates for this route is unknown. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study comparing proportion of bleeding associated with transjugular versus percutaneous native kidney biopsies in all patients in France in the 2010-2019 period. Major bleeding at day 8 (i.e., blood transfusions, hemorrhage/hematoma, angiographic intervention, nephrectomy) and risk of death at day 30 were assessed, and we used a bleeding risk score initially developed for the percutaneous route. Results: Our analysis included 60,331 patients (transjugular route: 5305; percutaneous route: 55,026 patients). The observed proportion of major bleeding varied widely (transjugular vs. percutaneous): 0.4% versus 0.5% for the lowest risk scores (0-4) to 19.1% versus 30.8% for the highest risk scores (>= 35). Transjugular was more frequently used than percutaneous route (39% vs. 24%) when the risk score was >= 20 (15,133/60,331; 25% of all patients). Transjugular was associated with a lower risk of major bleeding than percutaneous route in multivariate analyses (odds ratio [OR]: 0.88 [0.78-0.99]), especially for scores >= 20 (OR: 0.83 [0.72-0.96], (i.e., 25% of patients). Major bleeding was associated with an increased risk of death both for transjugular (OR: 1.77 [1.00-3.14]) and percutaneous (OR: 1.80 [1.43-2.28]) routes. Conclusions: The transjugular route is independently associated with a lower risk of bleeding than the percutaneous route, especially in high-risk patients identified by a preprocedure risk score >= 20 (i.e., 25% of patients). Major bleeding is associated with an increased risk of death for both routes.

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