articleNew England Journal of MedicineMay 15, 2016BRONZE OA

Initiation Strategies for Renal-Replacement Therapy in the Intensive Care Unit

Inserm · Université Paris Cité · +24 more institutions

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Abstract

Background

The timing of renal-replacement therapy in critically ill patients who have acute kidney injury but no potentially life-threatening complication directly related to renal failure is a subject of debate.

Methods

In this multicenter randomized trial, we assigned patients with severe acute kidney injury (Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes [KDIGO] classification, stage 3 [stages range from 1 to 3, with higher stages indicating more severe kidney injury]) who required mechanical ventilation, catecholamine infusion, or both and did not have a potentially life-threatening complication directly related to renal failure to either an early or a delayed strategy of renal-replacement therapy. With the early strategy, renal-replacement therapy was started immediately after randomization. With the delayed strategy, renal-replacement therapy was initiated if at least one of the following criteria was met: severe hyperkalemia, metabolic acidosis, pulmonary edema, blood urea nitrogen level higher than 112 mg per deciliter, or oliguria for more than 72 hours after randomization. The primary outcome was overall survival at day 60.

Citation impact

1,217
total citations
FWCI
91.66
Percentile
100%
References
41
Citations per year

Authors

25

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Renal replacement therapy
  • Medicine
  • Acute kidney injury
  • Oliguria
  • Randomization
  • Kidney disease
  • Intensive care unit
  • Blood urea nitrogen
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