Division of Nephrology, Department of Pediatrics and Communicable Diseases, C.S. Mott Children's Hospital, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA,
Intensive Care Med. 2014 Oct;40(10):1481-8. doi: 10.1007/s00134-014-3391-8. Epub 2014 Jul 31.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) occurs commonly in critically ill children and has been associated with increased mortality of up to 50 %. The Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) AKI working group has proposed a standardized definition of AKI. Utilizing routinely available clinical data, we evaluated the KDIGO AKI criteria and the relationship of AKI with relevant outcomes in a single center tertiary pediatric intensive care (PICU) and cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) population.
The University of Michigan Pediatric Critical Care Database was probed for all discharges from the pediatric intensive care and cardiac intensive care units between July 2011 and October 2013 (N = 4,645). The KDIGO serum creatinine (SCr)-based criteria staged AKI with the modification that a minimum SCr of greater than 0.5 mg/dL was required to be classified as AKI. Exclusion: end-stage renal disease, new renal transplant, missing PRISM III data, or no measured Cr during intensive care unit (ICU) admission (N = 1,636).
AKI occurred in 737 (24.5 %, stage 1 = 193, stage 2 = 189, and stage 3 = 355) of 3,009 discharges (PICU N = 1,870, CICU N = 1,139) that included 2,415 patients. In multivariate analysis AKI was associated with increased ICU length of stay (LOS) in hours (stage I β = 42.2, p = 0.024, II β = 74.1, p = 0.003, III β = 215.8, p < 0.001). Multivariate analysis showed that AKI was associated with increased odds of ICU mortality (OR 3.4, 95 % CI 2.0-6.0) and increased length of mechanical ventilation among those requiring mechanical ventilation (β = 2.3 days, p < 0.001).
Using the KDIGO criteria to define AKI, we observed a high prevalence of AKI among critically ill children. Worsening stages of AKI were associated with increased ICU LOS, and AKI was independently associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation and increased mortality. The KDIGO criteria describe clinically relevant AKI in a broad pediatric critical care population.
急性肾损伤(AKI)在危重症患儿中较为常见,其死亡率可高达 50%。肾脏疾病:改善全球预后(KDIGO)AKI 工作组提出了 AKI 的标准化定义。本研究利用常规临床数据,评估了 KDIGO AKI 标准,并在单一中心的儿科重症监护病房(PICU)和心脏重症监护病房(CICU)人群中研究了 AKI 与相关结局的关系。
2011 年 7 月至 2013 年 10 月,我们对密歇根大学儿科重症监护数据库中所有来自 PICU 和 CICU 的出院患者进行了调查(N=4645)。KDIGO 基于血清肌酐(SCr)的标准对 AKI 进行分期,该标准的修改是要求 SCr 至少增加 0.5mg/dL 才能被归类为 AKI。排除标准:终末期肾病、新的肾移植、PRISM III 数据缺失或 ICU 入院期间无 SCr 测量值(N=1636)。
3009 例出院患者中有 737 例(24.5%,1 期=193 例,2 期=189 例,3 期=355 例)(PICU N=1870 例,CICU N=1139 例)发生 AKI,包括 2415 例患者。多变量分析显示,AKI 与 ICU 住院时间(LOS)增加有关(1 期β=42.2,p=0.024,2 期β=74.1,p=0.003,3 期β=215.8,p<0.001)。多变量分析显示,AKI 与 ICU 死亡率增加(OR 3.4,95%CI 2.0-6.0)和需要机械通气的患者机械通气时间延长有关(β=2.3 天,p<0.001)。
使用 KDIGO 标准来定义 AKI,我们观察到危重症患儿 AKI 的患病率较高。AKI 严重程度的恶化与 ICU LOS 增加有关,AKI 与机械通气时间延长和死亡率增加独立相关。KDIGO 标准描述了广泛的儿科重症监护人群中具有临床意义的 AKI。