4.4 Article

Predicting the risk of acute kidney injury in primary care: derivation and validation of STRATIFY-AKI

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE
Volume 73, Issue 733, Pages E605-E614

Publisher

ROYAL COLL GENERAL PRACTITIONERS
DOI: 10.3399/BJGP.2022.0389

Keywords

blood pressure; drug-related side effects and adverse reactions; electronic health records; epidemiology; primary health care; vascular diseases

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A prediction model has been developed in this study to aid treatment decisions by identifying high-risk AKI patients.
Background Antihypertensives reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease but are also associated with harms including acute kidney injury (AKI). Few data exist to guide clinical decision making regarding these risks. Aim To develop a prediction model estimating the risk of AKI in people potentially indicated for antihypertensive treatment. Design and setting Observational cohort study using routine primary care data from the Clinical Practice Research Datalink (CPRD) in England. Method People aged >= 40 years, with at least one blood pressure measurement between 130 mmHg and 179 mmHg were included. Outcomes were admission to hospital or death with AKI within 1, 5, and 10 years. The model was derived with data from CPRD GOLD (n = 1 772 618), using a Fine-Gray competing risks approach, with subsequent recalibration using pseudo-values. External validation used data from CPRD Aurum (n = 3 805 322). Results The mean age of participants was 59.4 years and 52% were female. The final model consisted of 27 predictors and showed good discrimination at 1, 5, and 10 years (C-statistic for 10-year risk 0.821, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.818 to 0.823). There was some overprediction at the highest predicted probabilities (ratio of observed to expected event probability for 10-year risk 0.633, 95% CI = 0.621 to 0.645), affecting patients with the highest risk. Most patients (>95%)hada low 1- to 5-year risk of AKI, and at 10 years only 0.1% of the population had a high AKI and low CVD risk. Conclusion This clinical prediction model enables GPs to accurately identify patients at high risk of AKI, which will aid treatment decisions. As the vast majority of patients were at low risk, such a model may provide useful reassurance that most antihypertensive treatment is safe and appropriate while flagging the few for whom this is not the case.

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