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Title: | First post-operative urinary kidney injury biomarkers and association with the duration of AKI in the TRIBE-AKI cohort | Authors: | Coca S.G. Nadkarni G.N. Garg A.X. Koyner J. Thiessen-Philbrook H. McArthur E. Shlipak M.G. Parikh C.R. Raman J. Jeevanandam V. Akhter S. Edelstein C. Passik C. Nagy J. Swaminathan M. Chu M. Goldbach M. Guo L.R. McKenzie N. Myers M.L. Novick R. Quantz M. Zappitelli M. Palijan A. Dewar M. Darr U. Hashim S. Elefteriades J. Geirsson A. Garwood S. Butrymowicz I. Krumholz H. |
Keywords: | albumin biological marker creatinine fatty acid binding protein interleukin 18 kidney injury molecule 1 neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin biological marker creatinine FABP1 protein, human fatty acid binding protein HAVCR1 protein, human interleukin 18 kidney injury molecule 1 neutrophil gelatinase associated lipocalin acute kidney failure adult aged albumin urine level Article cohort analysis comorbidity controlled clinical trial controlled study creatinine blood level disease association disease duration disease severity female follow up glomerulus filtration rate heart surgery high risk patient human major clinical study male medical history mortality rate multicenter study postoperative period prospective study protein urine level urinalysis urine level Acute Kidney Injury adverse effects albuminuria blood mortality prognosis time factor urine Acute Kidney Injury Aged Albuminuria Biomarkers Cardiac Surgical Procedures Creatinine Fatty Acid-Binding Proteins Female Hepatitis A Virus Cellular Receptor 1 Humans Interleukin-18 Lipocalin-2 Male Prognosis Prospective Studies Time Factors |
Issue Date: | 2016 | Citation: | Coca S.G., Nadkarni G.N., Garg A.X., Koyner J., Thiessen-Philbrook H., McArthur E., Shlipak M.G., Parikh C.R., Raman J., Jeevanandam V., Akhter S., Edelstein C., Passik C., Nagy J., Swaminathan M., Chu M., Goldbach M., Guo L.R., McKenzie N., Myers M.L., Novick R., Quantz M., Zappitelli M., Palijan A., Dewar M., Darr U., Hashim S., Elefteriades J., Geirsson A., Garwood S., Butrymowicz I., Krumholz H. (2016). First post-operative urinary kidney injury biomarkers and association with the duration of AKI in the TRIBE-AKI cohort. PLoS ONE 11 (8) : e0161098. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0161098 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International | Abstract: | Background: We previously demonstrated that assessment of the duration of AKI, in addition to magnitude of rise in creatinine alone, adds prognostic information for long-term survival. We evaluated whether post-operative kidney injury biomarkers in urine collected immediately after cardiac surgery associate with duration of serum creatinine elevation. Methods: We studied 1199 adults undergoing cardiac surgery in a prospective cohort study (TRIBEAKI) and examined the association between the levels of five urinary biomarkers individually at 0-6 hours after surgery: interleukin-18 (IL-18), neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1), liver fatty acid binding protein (L-FABP) and albumin with duration of serum creatinine-based AKIN criteria for AKI (0 (no AKI), 1-2, 3-6, >7 days). Results: Overall, 407 (34%) patients had at least stage 1 AKI, of whom 251 (61.7%) had duration of 1-2 days, 118 (28.9%) had duration 3-6 days, and 38 (9.3%) had duration of >7 days. Higher concentrations of all biomarkers (per log increase) were independently associated with a greater odds of a longer duration of AKI; odds ratios and 95%confidence intervals using ordinal logistic regression were the following: IL-18: 1.22, 1.13-1.32; KIM-1: 1.36, 1.21-1.52; albumin 1.20, 1.09-1.32; L-FABP 1.11, 1.04-1.19; NGAL 1.06, 1.00-1.14). AKI duration of 7 days or longer was associated with a 5-fold adjusted risk of mortality at 3 years. Conclusions: There was an independent dose-response association between urinary levels of injury biomarkers immediately after cardiac surgery and longer duration of AKI. Duration of AKI was also associated with long term mortality. Future studies should explore the potential utility of these urinary kidney injury biomarkers to enrich enrollment of patients at risk for longer duration of AKI into trials of interventions to prevent or treat post-operative AKI. © 2016 Coca et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. | Source Title: | PLoS ONE | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/161561 | ISSN: | 19326203 | DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pone.0161098 | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International |
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