Yamamoto Ryo, Yamakawa Kazuma, Yoshizawa Jo, Kaito Daiki, Umemura Yutaka, Homma Koichiro, Sasaki Junichi
Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.
Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University, Osaka, Japan.
J Intensive Care Med. 2025 Feb;40(2):191-199. doi: 10.1177/08850666241268390. Epub 2024 Aug 2.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in sepsis and a urine output <0.5 mL/kg/h associated with increased mortality is incorporated into AKI diagnosis. We aimed to identify the urine-output threshold associated with increased AKI incidence and hypothesized that a higher urine output than a specified threshold, which differs from the predominantly used 0.5 mL/kg/h threshold, would be associated with an increased AKI incidence.
This was a post-hoc analysis of a nationwide prospective observational study. This study included adult patients newly diagnosed with sepsis and requiring intensive care. Urine output on the day of sepsis diagnosis was categorized as low, moderate, or high (<0.5, 0.5-1.0, and >1.0 mL/kg/h, respectively), and we compared AKI incidence, renal replacement therapy (RRT) requirement, and 28-day survival by category. Estimated probabilities for these outcomes were also compared after adjusting for patient background and hourly fluid administration.
Among 172 eligible patients, AKI occurred in 46.3%, 48.3%, and 53.1% of those with high, moderate, and low urine output, respectively. The probability of AKI was lower in patients with high urine output than in those with low output (43.6% vs 56.5%; = .028), whereas RRT requirement was lower in patients with high and moderate urine output (11.7% and 12.8% vs 49.1%; < .001). Patients with low urine output demonstrated significantly lower survival (87.7% vs 82.8% and 67.8%; = .018). Cubic spline curves for AKI, RRT, and survival prediction indicated different urine-output thresholds, including <1.2 to 1.3 mL/kg/h for AKI and <0.6 to 0.8 mL/kg/h for RRT and mortality risk.
Urine output >1.0 mL/kg/h on the day of sepsis diagnosis was associated with lower AKI incidence. The urine-output threshold was higher for developing AKI than for RRT requirement or mortality.
急性肾损伤(AKI)在脓毒症中很常见,尿量<0.5 mL/kg/h且死亡率增加被纳入AKI诊断标准。我们旨在确定与AKI发病率增加相关的尿量阈值,并假设高于特定阈值(不同于主要使用的0.5 mL/kg/h阈值)的尿量会与AKI发病率增加相关。
这是一项对全国前瞻性观察性研究的事后分析。该研究纳入了新诊断为脓毒症且需要重症监护的成年患者。脓毒症诊断当天的尿量分为低、中、高(分别为<0.5、0.5 - 1.0和>1.0 mL/kg/h),我们按类别比较了AKI发病率、肾脏替代治疗(RRT)需求和28天生存率。在调整患者背景和每小时液体输入量后,还比较了这些结果的估计概率。
在172例符合条件的患者中,高、中、低尿量患者的AKI发生率分别为46.3%、48.3%和53.1%。高尿量患者发生AKI的概率低于低尿量患者(43.6%对56.5%;P = 0.028),而高尿量和中等尿量患者的RRT需求较低(11.7%和12.8%对49.1%;P<0.001)。低尿量患者的生存率显著较低(87.7%对82.8%和67.8%;P = 0.018)。AKI、RRT和生存预测的三次样条曲线表明了不同的尿量阈值,包括AKI为<1.2至1.3 mL/kg/h,RRT和死亡风险为<0.6至0.8 mL/kg/h。
脓毒症诊断当天尿量>1.0 mL/kg/h与较低的AKI发病率相关。发生AKI的尿量阈值高于RRT需求或死亡率的阈值。