Discovery and validation of cell cycle arrest biomarkers in human acute kidney injury
Mayo Clinic · University of Pittsburgh · +43 more institutions
Abstract
Acute kidney injury (AKI) can evolve quickly and clinical measures of function often fail to detect AKI at a time when interventions are likely to provide benefit. Identifying early markers of kidney damage has been difficult due to the complex nature of human AKI, in which multiple etiologies exist. The objective of this study was to identify and validate novel biomarkers of AKI.
We performed two multicenter observational studies in critically ill patients at risk for AKI - discovery and validation. The top two markers from discovery were validated in a second study (Sapphire) and compared to a number of previously described biomarkers. In the discovery phase, we enrolled 522 adults in three distinct cohorts including patients with sepsis, shock, major surgery, and trauma and examined over 300 markers. In the Sapphire validation study, we enrolled 744 adult subjects with critical illness and without evidence of AKI at enrollment; the final analysis cohort was a heterogeneous sample of 728 critically ill patients. The primary endpoint was moderate to severe AKI (KDIGO stage 2 to 3) within 12 hours of sample collection.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 52.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 38
Authors
41- KKKianoush Kashani
Mayo Clinic
- AAAli Al‐Khafaji
University of Pittsburgh
- TAThomas Ardiles
Theodore Roosevelt High School, Valleywise Health
- AAAntonio Artigas
Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Enfermedades Respiratorias, Deleted Institution
- SMSean M. Bagshaw
University of Alberta
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Acute kidney injury
- Intensive care medicine
- Emergency medicine
- Bioinformatics
- Internal medicine
- Peace, Justice and strong institutions