Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
J Arthroplasty. 2019 Jun;34(6):1240-1243. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2019.01.058. Epub 2019 Jan 31.
This retrospective study compared the change in serum creatinine between African American and Caucasian total knee arthroplasty (TKA) patients. The authors hypothesized that African Americans would demonstrate significantly greater change, and that a significantly greater proportion would demonstrate creatinine changes consistent with acute kidney injury (AKI).
Primary TKAs performed at a single institution between July 2011 and June 2016 were identified: 1035 primary TKAs met inclusion and exclusion criteria (110 African American, 925 Caucasian, excluding Hispanic and Asian patients). None were excluded based on gender, age, body mass index, preoperative diagnosis, or comorbidities. All patients had preoperative and postoperative creatinine levels available in the electronic medical records. Each patient received the same preop and postop protocol for nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug use along with other drugs administered including anesthesia. All patients received 1 g of intravenous vancomycin with some patients additionally receiving 1 g of vancomycin powder administered locally at the end of surgery. All patients were controlled for fluid intake and blood loss, along with no patient receiving a transfusion or intravenous contrast. Patient demographics and preoperative/postoperative serum creatinine were recorded and then analyzed for presence of AKI (≥0.3 mg/dL). Preoperative/postoperative serum creatinine concentrations were compared between African American and Caucasian patients using 2 × 2 repeated measures analysis of variance. Prevalence of patients in each group demonstrating AKI was calculated using Fisher's exact test.
African American patients had significantly greater serum creatinine preoperatively (1.00 ± 0.26 vs 0.90 ± 0.22, P < .001) and a significantly greater increase postoperatively (0.10 vs 0.03, P < .001). A significantly greater number of African American patients demonstrated AKI (10.9% vs 5.1%, P = .03). Furthermore, a significantly greater number of African American patients stayed in the hospital an additional 2 or more days for renal issues (2.7% vs 0.4%, P = .03).
Altered renal function was significantly more common in African American TKA patients. Future studies are necessary to determine if tailoring anti-inflammatories, perioperative medications, and preoperative comorbidities reduce the risk of renal injury and/or a longer hospital stay for this subset of patients.
本回顾性研究比较了非裔美国人和白种人全膝关节置换术(TKA)患者的血清肌酐变化。作者假设非裔美国人的变化会显著更大,并且有更大比例的人会出现与急性肾损伤(AKI)一致的肌酐变化。
确定了 2011 年 7 月至 2016 年 6 月在一家机构进行的初次 TKA:1035 例初次 TKA 符合纳入和排除标准(110 例非裔美国人,925 例白种人,不包括西班牙裔和亚洲患者)。没有根据性别、年龄、体重指数、术前诊断或合并症排除任何患者。所有患者的电子病历中都有术前和术后的肌酐水平。每位患者在术前和术后均接受相同的非甾体抗炎药使用方案,以及在手术结束时局部给予的其他药物,包括麻醉。所有患者均接受 1 克静脉万古霉素,部分患者还额外接受 1 克万古霉素粉末。所有患者均控制液体摄入和失血,且无患者输血或静脉内使用造影剂。记录患者的人口统计学资料和术前/术后血清肌酐,并分析是否存在 AKI(≥0.3mg/dL)。采用 2×2 重复测量方差分析比较非裔美国人和白种人患者的术前/术后血清肌酐浓度。采用 Fisher 精确检验计算每组发生 AKI 的患者比例。
非裔美国人患者术前的血清肌酐显著升高(1.00±0.26 比 0.90±0.22,P<.001),术后的升高也显著更大(0.10 比 0.03,P<.001)。非裔美国人患者中 AKI 的发生率显著更高(10.9%比 5.1%,P=.03)。此外,非裔美国人患者因肾脏问题而住院时间延长 2 天或以上的比例显著更高(2.7%比 0.4%,P=.03)。
在非裔美国 TKA 患者中,肾功能改变更为常见。需要进一步研究以确定调整抗炎药、围手术期药物和术前合并症是否可以降低这类患者的肾损伤风险和/或延长住院时间。