Recovery after Acute Kidney Injury
University of Pittsburgh · University of Pittsburgh Medical Center · +3 more institutions
Abstract
We sought to examine different patterns for AKI reversal that are found in patients and assess how they relate to postdischarge outcomes.
We studied 16,968 critically ill patients with Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes stage 2 or 3 AKI, using an electronic database. Reversal of AKI was defined as alive and no longer meeting criteria for even stage 1. Recovery was defined as reversal at hospital discharge. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: We observed five patterns. The most common (4,508; 26.6%) was early reversal that was sustained through discharge, but almost as many patients (4,496; 26.5%) had no reversal at all. The remaining patients had late reversal after Day 7 (9.7%); early reversal with one or more relapses, but with ultimate recovery (22.5%); and relapsing without recovery (14.7%). Outcomes for patients with these phenotypes were quite different, with age-adjusted 1-year survival varying from more than 90% for early reversal to less than 40% for patients never reversing. Relapses are common (37.3%), especially in the first 72 hours after reversal, and are associated with a fivefold increased risk for death by 1 year compared with early sustained reversal.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 17.10
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 27
Authors
5- JAJohn A. KellumCorresponding
University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
- FEFlorentina E. Sileanu
University of Pittsburgh, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
- ABAzra Bihorac
University of Florida
- EAEric A. J. Hoste
Ghent University Hospital
- LSLakhmir S. Chawla
Veterans Health Administration
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Acute kidney injury
- Kidney disease
- Severity of illness
- Disease
- Stage (stratigraphy)
- Intensive care medicine
- Internal medicine
- Good health and well-being