Renal Registry, Kidney Association, Brandon House 20a1, Southmead Road, Bristol, BS34 7RR, UK.
Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMC Nephrol. 2023 May 24;24(1):144. doi: 10.1186/s12882-023-03094-5.
Incidence of acute kidney injury (AKI) is known to peak in winter months. This is likely influenced by seasonality of commonly associated acute illnesses. We set out to assess seasonal mortality trends for patients who develop AKI across the English National Health Service (NHS) and to better understand associations with patient 'case-mix'.
The study cohort included all hospitalised adult patients in England who triggered a biochemical AKI alert in 2017. We modelled the impact of season on 30-day mortality using multivariable logistic regression; adjusting for age, sex, ethnicity, index of multiple deprivation (IMD), primary diagnosis, comorbidity (RCCI), elective/emergency admission, peak AKI stage and community/hospital acquired AKI. Seasonal odds ratios for AKI mortality were then calculated and compared across individual NHS hospital trusts.
The crude 30-day mortality for hospitalised AKI patients was 33% higher in winter compared to summer. Case-mix adjustment for a wide range of clinical and demographic factors did not fully explain excess winter mortality. The adjusted odds ratio of patients dying in winter vs. summer was 1.25 (1.22-1.29), this was higher than for Autumn and Spring vs. Summer, 1.09 (1.06-1.12) and 1.07 (1.04-1.11) respectively and varied across different NHS trusts (9 out of 90 centres outliers).
We have demonstrated an excess winter mortality risk for hospitalised patients with AKI across the English NHS, which could not be fully explained by seasonal variation in patient case-mix. Whilst the explanation for worse winter outcomes is not clear, unaccounted differences including 'winter-pressures' merit further investigation.
急性肾损伤 (AKI) 的发病率已知在冬季达到高峰。这可能受到与常见急性疾病相关的季节性影响。我们旨在评估英格兰国民保健服务体系 (NHS) 中发生 AKI 的患者的季节性死亡趋势,并更好地了解与患者“病例组合”的关联。
研究队列包括 2017 年在英格兰住院的所有触发生化 AKI 警报的成年患者。我们使用多变量逻辑回归模型来评估季节对 30 天死亡率的影响;调整年龄、性别、种族、多重剥夺指数 (IMD)、主要诊断、合并症 (RCCI)、择期/紧急入院、峰值 AKI 分期和社区/医院获得性 AKI。然后计算 AKI 死亡率的季节性优势比,并在各个 NHS 医院信托之间进行比较。
与夏季相比,冬季住院 AKI 患者的 30 天死亡率高出 33%。对广泛的临床和人口统计学因素进行病例组合调整并不能完全解释冬季死亡人数过多的情况。与夏季相比,冬季患者死亡的调整后优势比为 1.25(1.22-1.29),高于秋季和春季的 1.09(1.06-1.12)和 1.07(1.04-1.11),且在不同的 NHS 信托中存在差异(90 个中心中的 9 个为异常值)。
我们已经证明,在整个英格兰 NHS 中,住院 AKI 患者的冬季死亡风险过高,这不能完全用患者病例组合的季节性变化来解释。虽然冬季结果恶化的原因尚不清楚,但包括“冬季压力”在内的未被解释的差异值得进一步调查。