4.6 Article

In-Hospital and 1-Year Mortality Trends in a National Cohort of US Veterans with Acute Kidney Injury

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AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.2215/CJN.01730221

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acute kidney injury; mortality; epidemiology and outcomes; veterans; cohort studies

资金

  1. Ann Arbor Veterans Affairs Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, Michigan

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This retrospective cohort study found that AKI patients have high mortality rates during their hospitalization and within one year after hospitalization, with over one in four patients dying within one year. There has been no significant progress in improving in-hospital or long-term AKI survivorship over the past decade.
Background and objectives AKI, a frequent complication among hospitalized patients, confers excess short-and long-term mortality. We sought to determine trends in in-hospital and 1-year mortality associated with AKI as defined by Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes consensus criteria.Design, setting, participants, & measurements This retrospective cohort study used data from the national Veterans Health Administration on all patients hospitalized from October 1, 2008 to September 31, 2017. AKI was defined by Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes serum creatinine criteria. In-hospital and 1-year mortality trends were analyzed in patients with and without AKI using Cox regression with year as a continuous variable.Results We identified 1,688,457 patients and 2,689,093 hospitalizations across the study period. Among patients with AKI, 6% died in hospital, and 28% died within 1 year. In contrast, in-hospital and 1-year mortality rates were 0.8% and 14%, respectively, among non-AKI hospitalizations. During the study period, there was a slight decline in crude in-hospital AKI-associated mortality (hazard ratio, 0.98 per year; 95% confidence interval, 0.98 to 0.99) that was attenuated after accounting for patient demographics, comorbid conditions, and acute hospitalization characteristics (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.99 per year; 95% confidence interval, 0.99 to 1.00). This stable temporal trend in mortality persisted at 1 year (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.00 per year; 95% confidence interval, 0.99 to 1.00).Conclusions AKI associated mortality remains high, as greater than one in four patients with AKI died within 1 year of hospitalization. Over the past decade, there seems to have been no significant progress toward improving in-hospital or long-term AKI survivorship.

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