Background: To determine the clinical outcome for intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) patients with pre-existing renal failure in the United States.

Methods: We analyzed the data from Nationwide Inpatient Sample (2008-2012) for all ICH patients with or without pre-existing renal failure. Patients were identified using the International Classification of Disease, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes. Baseline characteristics, in-hospital complications, and exposure to invasive procedures were compared between groups. Discharge outcomes (mortality, minimal disability, and moderate-to-severe disability) were compared between the two groups, before and after adjusting for the presence of other medical comorbidities, in-hospital complications, and exposure to invasive procedures.

Results: Of the 328,728 patients with ICH, 36,067 (11.8%) had pre-existing renal failure as a comorbidity. There were higher rates for in-hospital complications like myocardial infarction (3.5% versus 1.9%, P ≤ .0001), sepsis (5.4% versus 3.0%, P ≤ .0001), pneumonia (7.1% versus 5.3%, P ≤ .0001), deep venous thrombosis (1.6% versus 1.2%, P = .0041), urinary tract infections (16.9% versus 15.1%, P = .0101), and gastrointestinal bleeding (0.4% versus 0.2%, P ≤ .0154), longer hospital stay (9.4 ± 14.4 versus 7.7 ± 11.4; P < .0001), and higher mean hospital charges ($86497.9 ± 131708.1 versus $69583.4 ± 110629.1; P < .0001) in patients with pre-existing renal failure . The in-hospital mortality was also higher among patients with pre-existing renal failure as comorbidity in both univariate (26.4% versus 25.3 %, P = .0010) and multivariate analysis (odds ratio [OR] = 1.124 [1.042-1.213], P = .0025). There was no statistically significant difference for in terms of moderate to severe disability between 2 groups (OR = 1.030 [0.962-1.104], P value: .3953 in multivariate analysis when analysis was limited to alive patients.

Conclusions: Patients with ICH, who present with pre-existing renal failure, have higher rates of in-hospital mortality but not for disability, the difference remained significant after adjusting for the presence of other medical comorbidities, in-hospital complications or exposure to invasive procedures.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jstrokecerebrovasdis.2018.07.036DOI Listing

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