Dynamic Predictive Scores for Cardiac Surgery-Associated Acute Kidney Injury.

J Am Heart Assoc

Department of Nephrology, Zhongshan Hospital, Shanghai Medical College, Fudan University, Shanghai, China Shanghai Kidney and Dialysis Institute, Shanghai, China Shanghai Kidney and Blood Purification Laboratory, Shanghai, China

Published: August 2016

Background: Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (CSA-AKI) is a common complication with a poor prognosis. In order to identify modifiable perioperative risk factors for AKI, which existing risk scores are insufficient to predict, a dynamic clinical risk score to allow clinicians to estimate the risk of CSA-AKI from preoperative to early postoperative periods is needed.

Methods And Results: A total of 7233 cardiac surgery patients in our institution from January 2010 to April 2013 were enrolled prospectively and distributed into 2 cohorts. Among the derivation cohort, logistic regression was used to analyze CSA-AKI risk factors preoperatively, on the day of ICU admittance and 24 hours after ICU admittance. Sex, age, valve surgery combined with coronary artery bypass grafting, preoperative NYHA score >2, previous cardiac surgery, preoperative kidney (without renal replacement therapy) disease, intraoperative cardiopulmonary bypass application, intraoperative erythrocyte transfusions, and postoperative low cardiac output syndrome were identified to be associated with CSA-AKI. Among the other 1152 patients who served as a validation cohort, the point scoring of risk factor combinations led to area under receiver operator characteristics curves (AUROC) values for CSA-AKI prediction of 0.74 (preoperative), 0.75 (on the day of ICU admission), and 0.82 (postoperative), and Hosmer-Lemeshow goodness-of-fit tests revealed a good agreement of expected and observed CSA-AKI rates.

Conclusions: The first dynamic predictive score system, with Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) AKI definition, was developed and predictive efficiency for CSA-AKI was validated in cardiac surgery patients.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5015294PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.116.003754DOI Listing

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