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Published ahead of print on April 16, 2008
Clinical Journal of the American Society of Nephrology
© 2008 American Society of Nephrology
doi: 10.2215/CJN.05431207
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Received December 5, 2007
Accepted on March 9, 2008

ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Ascertainment and Epidemiology of Acute Kidney Injury Varies with Definition Interpretation

Michael Zappitelli *1, Chirag R. Parikh {dagger}, Ayse Akcan-Arikan *, Kimberley K. Washburn *, Brady S. Moffett {ddagger}, and Stuart L. Goldstein *

*Department of Pediatrics, Renal Section, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas; {dagger}Section of Nephrology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut; and {ddagger}Department of Pharmacy, Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas


1 To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: mzaprdr{at}yahoo.ca.


   Abstract

Background and objectives: Differences in defining acute kidney injury (AKI) may impact incidence ascertainment. We assessed the effects of different AKI definition interpretation methods on epidemiology ascertainment.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements: Two groups were studied at Texas Children’s Hospital, Houston, Texas: 150 critically ill children (prospective) and 254 noncritically ill, hospitalized children receiving aminoglycosides (retrospective). SCr was collected for 14 d in the prospective study and 21 d in the retrospective study. Children with known baseline serum creatinine (bSCr) were classified by the pediatric Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss, End-Stage Kidney Disease (pRIFLE) AKI definition using SCr change (pRIFLE{Delta}SCr), estimated creatinine clearance (eCCl) change (pRIFLE{Delta}CCl), and the Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) definition. In subjects without known bSCr, bSCR was estimated as eCCl = 100 (eCCl100) and 120 ml/min per 1.73 m2 (eCCl120), admission SCr (AdmSCr) and lower/upper normative values (NormsMin, NormsMax). The differential impact of each AKI definition interpretation on incidence estimation and severity distribution was evaluated.

Results: pRIFLE{Delta}SCr and AKIN led to identical AKI distributions. pRIFLE{Delta}CCl resulted in 14.5% (critically ill) and 11% (noncritical) more patients diagnosed with AKI compared to other methods (P 0.05). Different bSCr estimates led to differences in AKI incidence, from 12% (AdmSCr) to 87.8% (NormsMin) (P 0.05) in the critically ill group and from 4.6% (eCCl100) to 43.1% (NormsMin) (P 0.05) in the noncritical group.

Conclusions: AKI definition variation causes interstudy heterogeneity. AKI definition should be standardized so that results can be compared across studies.




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J. W. Pickering, C. M. Frampton, and Z. H. Endre
Evaluation of Trial Outcomes in Acute Kidney Injury by Creatinine Modeling
Clin. J. Am. Soc. Nephrol., November 1, 2009; 4(11): 1705 - 1715.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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