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Impact of AKI care bundles on kidney and patient outcomes in hospitalized patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis

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BMC NEPHROLOGY
卷 22, 期 1, 页码 -

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BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12882-021-02534-4

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Acute kidney injury; Care bundle; Meta-analysis; Prevention; Systematic review

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The study found that implementing AKI care bundles in hospitalized patients can reduce the occurrence of moderate-severe AKI, especially in ICU settings. However, due to lack of data and heterogeneity in study design, firm conclusions about patient outcomes are difficult to draw. Compliance to AKI care bundles in hospitalized patients also shows high variability. Further research in targeted patient groups with complete and correct implementation of AKI care bundles is needed.
Background A bundle of preventive measures can be taken to avoid acute kidney injury (AKI) or progression of AKI. We performed a systematic review and meta-analysis to evaluate the compliance to AKI care bundles in hospitalized patients and its impact on kidney and patient outcomes. Methods Randomized controlled trials, observational and interventional studies were included. Studied outcomes were care bundle compliance, occurrence of AKI and moderate-severe AKI, use of kidney replacement therapy (KRT), kidney recovery, mortality (ICU, in-hospital and 30-day) and length-of-stay (ICU, hospital). The search engines PubMed, Embase and Google Scholar were used (January 1, 2012 - June 30, 2021). Meta-analysis was performed with the Mantel Haenszel test (risk ratio) and inverse variance (mean difference). Bias was assessed by the Cochrane risk of bias tool (RCT) and the NIH study quality tool (non-RCT). Results We included 23 papers of which 13 were used for quantitative analysis (4 RCT and 9 non-randomized studies with 25,776 patients and 30,276 AKI episodes). Six were performed in ICU setting. The number of trials pooled per outcome was low. There was a high variability in care bundle compliance (8 to 100%). Moderate-severe AKI was less frequent after bundle implementation [RR 0.78, 95%CI 0.62-0.97]. AKI occurrence and KRT use did not differ between the groups [resp RR 0.90, 95%CI 0.76-1.05; RR 0.67, 95%CI 0.38-1.19]. In-hospital and 30-day mortality was lower in AKI patients exposed to a care bundle [resp RR 0.81, 95%CI 0.73-0.90, RR 0.95 95%CI 0.90-0.99]; this could not be confirmed by randomized trials. Hospital length-of-stay was similar in both groups [MD -0.65, 95%CI -1.40,0.09]. Conclusion This systematic review and meta-analysis shows that implementation of AKI care bundles in hospitalized patients reduces moderate-severe AKI. This result is mainly driven by studies performed in ICU setting. Lack of data and heterogeneity in study design impede drawing firm conclusions about patient outcomes. Moreover, compliance to AKI care bundles in hospitalized patients is highly variable. Additional research in targeted patient groups at risk for moderate-severe AKI with correct and complete implementation of a feasible, well-tailored AKI care bundle is warranted. (CRD42020207523).

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