4.7 Article

The Utility of Novel Kidney Injury Biomarkers in Early Detection of CSA-AKI

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms232415864

Keywords

CSA-AKI; kidney injury biomarkers; cardiac surgery; cardiopulmonary by-pass

Funding

  1. Minister of Science and Higher Education program [002/RID/2021/22]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study indicates that plasma IL-8, plasma TNF-alpha, and urine NGAL/Cr show significant differences in postoperative biomarker concentrations between the AKI and no-AKI groups, serving as independent predictors of CSA-AKI. CKD is identified as an independent risk factor for CSA-AKI. Plasma IL-8, TNF-alpha, and urine NGAL/Cr are independent early indicators of CSA-AKI and offer a promising alternative to creatinine measurements.
Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (CSA-AKI) is one of the most common complications of cardiac surgery procedures. In this study, the authors attempt to provide new data regarding the application of novel kidney injury biomarkers in the early diagnostics of CSA-AKI. 128 adult patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery procedures with the use of cardiopulmonary by-pass (CPB) were enrolled in this study. Novel kidney injury biomarkers were marked in the plasma and urine 6 h after weaning from the CPB. A significant difference in the postoperative biomarkers' concentration between the AKI and no-AKI group was found, regarding plasma IL-8, plasma TNF-alpha and urine NGAL, normalized for creatinine excretion (NGAL/Cr). These were also independent predictors of CSA-AKI. An independent risk factor for CSA-AKI proved to be preoperative CKD. Plasma IL-8 and TNF-alpha, as well as urine NGAL/Cr, are independent early indicators of CSA-AKI and pose a promising alternative for creatinine measurements. The cut-off points for these biomarkers proposed in this investigation should be confronted with more data and revised to achieve a suitable diagnostic value.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available