Belcher Justin M, Garcia-Tsao Guadalupe, Sanyal Arun J, Thiessen-Philbrook Heather, Peixoto Aldo J, Perazella Mark A, Ansari Naheed, Lim Joseph, Coca Steven G, Parikh Chirag R
Program of Applied Translational Research, Sections of Nephrology and Clinical Epidemiology Research Center, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, Connecticut;
Clinical Epidemiology Research Center, Veterans Affairs Medical Center, West Haven, Connecticut; Digestive Diseases, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; Veterans Affairs-Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, Connecticut;
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2014 Nov 7;9(11):1857-67. doi: 10.2215/CJN.09430913. Epub 2014 Sep 2.
AKI is a common and severe complication in patients with cirrhosis. AKI progression was previously shown to correlate with in-hospital mortality. Therefore, accurately predicting which patients are at highest risk for AKI progression may allow more rapid and targeted treatment. Urinary biomarkers of structural kidney injury associate with AKI progression and mortality in multiple settings of AKI but their prognostic performance in patients with liver cirrhosis is not well known.
DESIGN, SETTING, PARTICIPANTS, & MEASUREMENTS: A multicenter, prospective cohort study was conducted at four tertiary care United States medical centers between 2009 and 2011. The study comprised patients with cirrhosis and AKI defined by the AKI Network criteria evaluating structural (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, IL-18, kidney injury molecule-1 [KIM-1], liver-type fatty acid-binding protein [L-FABP], and albuminuria) and functional (fractional excretion of sodium [FENa]) urinary biomarkers as predictors of AKI progression and in-hospital mortality.
Of 188 patients in the study, 44 (23%) experienced AKI progression alone and 39 (21%) suffered both progression and death during their hospitalization. Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin, IL-18, KIM-1, L-FABP, and albuminuria were significantly higher in patients with AKI progression and death. These biomarkers were independently associated with this outcome after adjusting for key clinical variables including model of end stage liver disease score, IL-18 (relative risk [RR], 4.09; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], 1.56 to 10.70), KIM-1 (RR, 3.13; 95% CI, 1.20 to 8.17), L-FABP (RR, 3.43; 95% CI, 1.54 to 7.64), and albuminuria (RR, 2.07; 95% CI, 1.05-4.10) per log change. No biomarkers were independently associated with progression without mortality. FENa demonstrated no association with worsening of AKI. When added to a robust clinical model, only IL-18 independently improved risk stratification on a net reclassification index.
Multiple structural biomarkers of kidney injury, but not FENa, are independently associated with progression of AKI and mortality in patients with cirrhosis. Injury marker levels were similar between those without progression and those with progression alone.
急性肾损伤(AKI)是肝硬化患者常见且严重的并发症。先前研究表明,AKI进展与住院死亡率相关。因此,准确预测哪些患者发生AKI进展的风险最高,可能有助于实现更快速且有针对性的治疗。在多种AKI情况下,肾脏结构损伤的尿液生物标志物与AKI进展及死亡率相关,但它们在肝硬化患者中的预后价值尚不清楚。
设计、地点、参与者及测量方法:2009年至2011年期间,在美国四个三级医疗中心进行了一项多中心前瞻性队列研究。该研究纳入了符合AKI网络标准定义的肝硬化合并AKI患者,评估结构(中性粒细胞明胶酶相关脂质运载蛋白、白细胞介素-18、肾损伤分子-1 [KIM-1]、肝型脂肪酸结合蛋白 [L-FABP] 和蛋白尿)和功能(尿钠排泄分数 [FENa])尿液生物标志物,以预测AKI进展和住院死亡率。
研究中的188例患者中,44例(23%)仅发生AKI进展,39例(21%)在住院期间既发生进展又死亡。发生AKI进展和死亡的患者中性粒细胞明胶酶相关脂质运载蛋白、白细胞介素-18、KIM-1、L-FABP和蛋白尿水平显著更高。在调整包括终末期肝病模型评分等关键临床变量后,这些生物标志物与该结局独立相关,白细胞介素-18(相对风险 [RR],4.09;95%置信区间 [95%CI],1.56至10.70),KIM-1(RR,3.13;95%CI,1.20至8.17),L-FABP(RR,3.43;95%CI,1.54至7.64),以及每对数变化的蛋白尿(RR,2.07;95%CI,1.05 - 4.10)。没有生物标志物与无死亡的进展独立相关。FENa与AKI恶化无关。当添加到一个强大的临床模型中时,只有白细胞介素-18在净重新分类指数上独立改善了风险分层。
多种肾脏损伤的结构生物标志物而非FENa,与肝硬化患者的AKI进展和死亡率独立相关。无进展患者和仅进展患者的损伤标志物水平相似。