4.6 Article

Critical illness myopathy and trajectory of recovery in acute kidney injury requiring continuous renal replacement therapy: a prospective observational trial protocol

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 13, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-072448

Keywords

acute renal failure; adult intensive & critical care; dialysis; neuromuscular disease; rehabilitation medicine

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Acute kidney injury requiring renal replacement therapy (AKI- RRT) is common in the ICU and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. The impact of AKI- RRT on skeletal muscle mass and function during and following critical illness remains unknown.
Introduction Acute kidney injury requiring renal replacement therapy (AKI- RRT) is common in the intensive care unit (ICU) and is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Continuous RRT (CRRT) non-selectively removes large amounts of amino acids from plasma, lowering serum amino acid concentrations and potentially depleting total -body amino acid stores. Therefore, the morbidity and mortality associated with AKI- RRT may be partly mediated through accelerated skeletal muscle atrophy and resulting muscle weakness. However, the impact of AKI- RRT on skeletal muscle mass and function during and following critical illness remains unknown. We hypothesise that patients with AKI- RRT have higher degrees of acute muscle loss than patients without AKI- RRT and that AKI- RRT survivors are less likely to recover muscle mass and function when compared with other ICU survivors.Methods and analysis This protocol describes a prospective, multicentre, observational trial assessing skeletal muscle size, quality and function in ICU patients with AKI- RRT. We will perform musculoskeletal ultrasound to longitudinally evaluate rectus femoris size and quality at baseline (within 48 hours of CRRT initiation), day 3, day 7 or at ICU discharge, at hospital discharge, and 1-3 months postdischarge. Additional skeletal muscle and physical function tests will be performed at hospital discharge and postdischarge follow -up. We will analyse the effect of AKI- RRT by comparing the findings in enrolled subjects to historical controls of critically ill patients without AKI- RRT using multivariable modelling.Ethics and dissemination We anticipate our study will reveal that AKI- RRT is associated with greater degrees of muscle loss and dysfunction along with impaired postdischarge recovery of physical function. These findings could impact the inhospital and postdischarge treatment plan for these patients to include focused attention on muscle strength and function. We intend to disseminate findings to participants, healthcare professionals, the public and other relevant groups via conference presentation and publication without any publication restrictions.

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