4.6 Article

National Surgical Quality Improvement Program Underestimates the Risk Associated With Mild and Moderate Postoperative Acute Kidney Injury

Journal

CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Volume 41, Issue 11, Pages 2570-2583

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e31829860fc

Keywords

acute kidney injury; American College of Surgeons; epidemiology and outcomes; Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes; National Surgical Quality Improvement Program; postoperative complications; risk; injury; failure; loss; and end-stage kidney; serum creatinine

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH)-National Institute of General Medical Sciences [K23GM087709]
  2. NIH and National Center for Research Resources (NCRR) [UL1 TR000064]
  3. Astute Medical [AST-111]
  4. I Heermann Anesthesia Foundation, Inc.
  5. Foundation for Anesthesia Education and Research (FAER)
  6. NIH NIGMS
  7. Astute Medical, Inc.
  8. NIH

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Objectives: In a single-center cohort of surgical patients, we assessed the association between postoperative change in serum creatinine and adverse outcomes and compared the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program's definition for acute kidney injury with consensus risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney and Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes definitions. Design: Retrospective single-center cohort. Setting: Academic tertiary medical center. Patients: Twenty-seven thousand eight hundred forty-one adult patients with no previous history of chronic kidney disease undergoing major surgery. Interventions: Risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney defines acute kidney injury as change in serum creatinine greater than or equal to 50% while Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes uses 0.3 mg/dL change from the reference serum creatinine. Since National Surgical Quality Improvement Program defines acute kidney injury as serum creatinine change greater than 2 mg/dL, it may underestimate the risk associated with less severe acute kidney injury. Measurements and Main Results: The optimal discrimination limits for both percent and absolute serum creatinine changes were calculated by maximizing sensitivity and specificity along the receiver operating characteristic curves for postoperative complications and mortality. Although prevalence of risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney-acute kidney injury was 37%, only 7% of risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney-acute kidney injury patients would be diagnosed with acute kidney injury using the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program definition. In multivariable logistic models, patients with risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney or Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes-acute kidney injury had a 10 times higher odds of dying compared to patients without acute kidney injury. The optimal discrimination limits for change in serum creatinine associated with adverse postoperative outcomes were as low as 0.2 mg/dL while the National Surgical Quality Improvement Program discrimination limit of 2.0 mg/dL had low sensitivity (0.05-0.28). Conclusions: Current American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program definition underestimates the risk associated with mild and moderate acute kidney injury otherwise captured by the consensus risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney and Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes criteria.

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