Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, 235 Jones Street Ultimo, Sydney, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Faculty of Health and Medicine, University of Newcastle, 130 University Drive, Callaghan, 2308, NSW, Australia.
BMC Nephrol. 2019 Jun 25;20(1):230. doi: 10.1186/s12882-019-1393-z.
Maternal kidney disease (acute kidney injury (AKI), advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD), dependence on dialysis or a kidney transplant) has a substantial impact on pregnancy, with risks of significant perinatal morbidity. These pregnancies require integrated multidisciplinary care to manage a complex and often challenging clinical situation. The ability to deliver optimal care is currently hindered by a lack of understanding around prevalence, management and outcomes in Australia. This study aims to expand an evidence base to improve clinical care of women with serious kidney impairment in pregnancy.
METHODS/DESIGN: The "Kidney Disease in Pregnancy Study" is a national prospective cohort study of women with stage 3b-5 CKD (including dialysis and transplant) and severe AKI in pregnancy, using the Australasian Maternity Outcomes Surveillance System (AMOSS). AMOSS incorporates Australian maternity units with > 50 births/year (n = 260), capturing approximately 96% of Australian births. We will identify women meeting the inclusion criteria who give birth in Australia between 1st August 2017 and 31st July 2018. Case identification will occur via monthly review of all births in Australian AMOSS sites and prospective notification to AMOSS via renal or obstetric clinics. AMOSS data collectors will capture key clinical data via a web-based data collection tool. The data collected will focus on the prevalence, medical and obstetric clinical care, and maternal and fetal outcomes of these high-risk pregnancies.
This study will increase awareness of the issue of serious renal impairment in pregnancy through engagement of 260 maternity units and obstetric and renal healthcare providers across the country. The study results will provide an evidence base for pre-pregnancy counselling and development of models of optimal clinical care, clinical guideline and policy development in Australia. Understanding current practices, gaps in care and areas for intervention will improve the care of women with serious renal impairment, women with high-risk pregnancies, their babies and their families.
母体肾脏疾病(急性肾损伤(AKI)、晚期慢性肾脏病(CKD)、依赖透析或肾移植)对妊娠有重大影响,围产期发病率显著增加。这些妊娠需要综合多学科护理,以管理复杂且常常具有挑战性的临床情况。目前,由于缺乏对澳大利亚患病率、管理和结局的了解,提供最佳护理的能力受到阻碍。本研究旨在扩大证据基础,以改善妊娠合并严重肾脏损害妇女的临床护理。
方法/设计:“妊娠肾脏病研究”是一项针对患有 3b-5 期 CKD(包括透析和移植)和严重 AKI 的妊娠妇女的全国前瞻性队列研究,使用澳大利亚围产期监测系统(AMOSS)。AMOSS 纳入了每年分娩量超过 50 例的澳大利亚产科单位(n=260),约占澳大利亚分娩量的 96%。我们将确定在 2017 年 8 月 1 日至 2018 年 7 月 31 日期间在澳大利亚分娩并符合纳入标准的妇女。通过对澳大利亚 AMOSS 站点的所有分娩进行每月审查以及通过肾脏或产科诊所向 AMOSS 进行前瞻性通知来识别病例。AMOSS 数据收集器将通过基于网络的数据收集工具捕获关键临床数据。收集的数据将重点关注这些高危妊娠的患病率、医疗和产科临床护理以及母婴结局。
这项研究将通过全国 260 个产科单位和产科及肾脏保健提供者的参与,提高对妊娠期间严重肾脏损害问题的认识。该研究结果将为澳大利亚的孕前咨询以及最佳临床护理模式、临床指南和政策制定提供证据基础。了解当前的实践、护理差距和干预领域将改善患有严重肾脏损害的妇女、高危妊娠妇女、她们的婴儿及其家庭的护理。