4.6 Article

Epidemiology of acute kidney injury in critically ill patients: the multinational AKI-EPI study

Journal

INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages 1411-1423

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00134-015-3934-7

Keywords

Acute kidney injury; Critically ill; Renal replacement therapy; Epidemiology; Kidney function; Hospital mortality

Funding

  1. Astute Medical
  2. Industrial Research Fund (IOF) from Ghent University
  3. Gambro
  4. BBraun
  5. Fresenius
  6. Baxter
  7. Alere
  8. AM Pharma
  9. Spectral
  10. Grifols
  11. Cytosorbents
  12. Alung
  13. Atox Bio
  14. Bard
  15. Kaneka
  16. International Safety Adverse Events Consortium
  17. Thrasos

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Current reports on acute kidney injury (AKI) in the intensive care unit (ICU) show wide variation in occurrence rate and are limited by study biases such as use of incomplete AKI definition, selected cohorts, or retrospective design. Our aim was to prospectively investigate the occurrence and outcomes of AKI in ICU patients. The Acute Kidney Injury-Epidemiologic Prospective Investigation (AKI-EPI) study was an international cross-sectional study performed in 97 centers on patients during the first week of ICU admission. We measured AKI by Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) criteria, and outcomes at hospital discharge. A total of 1032 ICU patients out of 1802 [57.3 %; 95 % confidence interval (CI) 55.0-59.6] had AKI. Increasing AKI severity was associated with hospital mortality when adjusted for other variables; odds ratio of stage 1 = 1.679 (95 % CI 0.890-3.169; p = 0.109), stage 2 = 2.945 (95 % CI 1.382-6.276; p = 0.005), and stage 3 = 6.884 (95 % CI 3.876-12.228; p < 0.001). Risk-adjusted rates of AKI and mortality were similar across the world. Patients developing AKI had worse kidney function at hospital discharge with estimated glomerular filtration rate less than 60 mL/min/1.73 m(2) in 47.7 % (95 % CI 43.6-51.7) versus 14.8 % (95 % CI 11.9-18.2) in those without AKI, p < 0.001. This is the first multinational cross-sectional study on the epidemiology of AKI in ICU patients using the complete KDIGO criteria. We found that AKI occurred in more than half of ICU patients. Increasing AKI severity was associated with increased mortality, and AKI patients had worse renal function at the time of hospital discharge. Adjusted risks for AKI and mortality were similar across different continents and regions.

Authors

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

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available