Division of Nephrology, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200040, China.
BMC Nephrol. 2011 Jun 29;12:30. doi: 10.1186/1471-2369-12-30.
Animal and human studies suggest that inflammation and malnutrition are common in acute kidney injury (AKI) patients. However, only a few studies reported CRP, a marker of inflammation, albumin, prealbumin and cholesterol, markers of nutritional status were associated with the prognosis of AKI patients. No study examined whether the combination of inflammatory and nutritional markers could predict the mortality of AKI patients.
155 patients with hospital-acquired AKI were recruited to this prospective cohort study according to RIFLE (Risk, Injury, Failure, Lost or End Stage Kidney) criteria. C-reactive protein (CRP), and the nutritional markers (albumin, prealbumin and cholesterol) measured at nephrology consultation were analyzed in relation to all cause mortality of these patients. In addition, CRP and prealbumin were also measured in healthy controls (n = 45), maintenance hemodialysis (n = 70) and peritoneal dialysis patients (n = 50) and then compared with AKI patients.
Compared with healthy controls and end-stage renal disease patients on maintenance hemodialysis or peritoneal dialysis, patients with AKI had significantly higher levels of CRP/prealbumin (p < 0.001). Higher level of serum CRP and lower levels of albumin, prealbumin and cholesterol were found to be significant in the patients with AKI who died within 28 days than those who survived >28 days. Similarly, the combined factors including the ratio of CRP to albumin (CRP/albumin), CRP/prealbumin and CRP/cholesterol were also significantly higher in the former group (p < 0.001 for all). Multivariate analysis (Cox regression) revealed that CRP/prealbumin was independently associated with mortality after adjustment for age, gender, sepsis and sequential organ failure assessment (SOFA, p = 0.027) while the others (CRP, albumin, prealbumin, cholesterol, CRP/albumin and CRP/cholesterol) became non-significantly associated. The hazard ratio was 1.00 (reference), 1.85, 2.25 and 3.89 for CRP/prealbumin increasing according to quartiles (p = 0.01 for the trend).
Inflammation and malnutrition were common in patients with AKI. Higher level of the ratio of CRP to prealbumin was associated with mortality of AKI patients independent of the severity of illness and it may be a valuable addition to SOFA score to independent of the severity of illness and it may be a valuable addition to SOFA score to predict the prognosis of AKI patients.
动物和人体研究表明,炎症和营养不良在急性肾损伤(AKI)患者中很常见。然而,只有少数研究报告 C 反应蛋白(CRP),炎症标志物,白蛋白、前白蛋白和胆固醇,营养状况的标志物与 AKI 患者的预后相关。尚无研究检查炎症和营养标志物的组合是否可预测 AKI 患者的死亡率。
根据 RIFLE(风险、损伤、衰竭、丧失或终末期肾脏)标准,将 155 名医院获得性 AKI 患者纳入本前瞻性队列研究。在肾病咨询时测量 C 反应蛋白(CRP)和营养标志物(白蛋白、前白蛋白和胆固醇),并与这些患者的全因死亡率相关。此外,还在健康对照组(n=45)、维持性血液透析患者(n=70)和腹膜透析患者(n=50)中测量 CRP 和前白蛋白,并与 AKI 患者进行比较。
与健康对照组和终末期肾病维持性血液透析或腹膜透析患者相比,AKI 患者的 CRP/前白蛋白水平显著升高(p<0.001)。与存活>28 天的患者相比,28 天内死亡的 AKI 患者的血清 CRP 水平更高,白蛋白、前白蛋白和胆固醇水平更低。同样,CRP/白蛋白(CRP/albumin)、CRP/前白蛋白和 CRP/胆固醇的比值等组合因素在前一组患者中也显著更高(所有 p<0.001)。多变量分析(Cox 回归)显示,在调整年龄、性别、脓毒症和序贯器官衰竭评估(SOFA)后,CRP/前白蛋白与死亡率独立相关(p=0.027),而其他因素(CRP、白蛋白、前白蛋白、胆固醇、CRP/albumin 和 CRP/cholesterol)则变得不相关。根据 quartiles,CRP/前白蛋白增加 1.00(参考)、1.85、2.25 和 3.89(p=0.01 趋势)。
炎症和营养不良在 AKI 患者中很常见。CRP 与前白蛋白比值升高与 AKI 患者的死亡率相关,独立于疾病严重程度,可能是 SOFA 评分的一个有价值的补充,以独立于疾病严重程度,它可能是 SOFA 评分的一个有价值的补充,以预测 AKI 患者的预后。