TY - JOUR
T1 - Continuous Urine Output-Based Alert Identifies Cardiac Surgery–associated Acute Kidney Injury Earlier Than Serum Creatinine
T2 - A Prospective and Retrospective Observational Study
AU - Predict AKI Group
AU - Moll, Vanessa
AU - Zhao, Manxu
AU - Minear, Steven
AU - Swaminathan, Madhav
AU - Kurz, Andrea
AU - Huang, Jiapeng
AU - Parr, K. Gage
AU - Stanton, Kelly
AU - Khanna, Ashish K.
AU - Smit, Marije
AU - Prabhakar, Amit
AU - Groh, Mark
AU - Kot, Mark
AU - Harris, Lynnette C.
AU - Sweatt, Nia
AU - Flores, Kelsey
AU - Reeves, Brandon
AU - Cusson, Bruce
AU - Nosow, Lillian
AU - Fanelli, Jessica
AU - Sands, Lauren
AU - Fowler, Jacob
AU - Howard, Easton
AU - Robinson, Samuel
AU - Wachnik, Anthony
AU - Fram, Madeline
AU - Fernando, Rohesh
AU - Garner, Chandrika
AU - Marchant, Bryan
AU - Morris, Benjamin
AU - Saha, Amit
AU - Egan, Katherine
AU - Teixeira, Camila
AU - Banerjee, Sanjay
AU - Essber, Hani
AU - Rössler, Julian
AU - Shaykhinurov, Eduard
AU - Silvers, Shavonne M.
AU - Blanton, Terry
AU - Pahwa, Siddharth
AU - Baronos, Stamatis
AU - Haines, Daniel
AU - England, Bryant
AU - Mariyappa, Ramesh
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors
PY - 2024/10
Y1 - 2024/10
N2 - Objective(s): Acute kidney injury (AKI) is defined and staged by reduced urine output (UO) and increased serum creatinine (SCr). UO is typically measured manually and documented in the electronic health record, making early and reliable detection of oliguria-based AKI and electronic data extraction challenging. The authors investigated the diagnostic performance of continuous UO, enabled by active drain line clearance–based alerts (Accuryn AKI Alert), compared with AKI stage 2 SCr criteria and their associations with length of stay, need for continuous renal replacement therapy, and 30-day mortality. Design: This study was a prospective and retrospective observational study. Setting: Nine tertiary centers participated. Participants: Cardiac surgery patients were enrolled. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: A total of 522 patients were analyzed. AKI stages 1, 2, and 3 were diagnosed in 32.18%, 30.46%, and 3.64% of patients based on UO, compared with 33.72%, 4.60%, and 3.26% of patients using SCr, respectively. Continuous UO-based alerts diagnosed stage ≥1 AKI 33.6 (IQR =15.43, 95.68) hours before stage ≥2 identified by SCr criteria. A SCr-based diagnosis of AKI stage ≥2 has been designated a Hospital Harm by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Using this criterion as a benchmark, AKI alerts had a discriminative power of 0.78. The AKI Alert for stage 1 was significantly associated with increased intensive care unit and hospital length of stay and continuous renal replacement therapy, and stage ≥2 alerts were associated with mortality. Conclusions: AKI Alert, based on continuous UO and enabled by active drain line clearance, detected AKI stages 1 and 2 before SCr criteria. Early AKI detection allows for early kidney optimization, potentially improving patient outcomes.
AB - Objective(s): Acute kidney injury (AKI) is defined and staged by reduced urine output (UO) and increased serum creatinine (SCr). UO is typically measured manually and documented in the electronic health record, making early and reliable detection of oliguria-based AKI and electronic data extraction challenging. The authors investigated the diagnostic performance of continuous UO, enabled by active drain line clearance–based alerts (Accuryn AKI Alert), compared with AKI stage 2 SCr criteria and their associations with length of stay, need for continuous renal replacement therapy, and 30-day mortality. Design: This study was a prospective and retrospective observational study. Setting: Nine tertiary centers participated. Participants: Cardiac surgery patients were enrolled. Interventions: None. Measurements and Main Results: A total of 522 patients were analyzed. AKI stages 1, 2, and 3 were diagnosed in 32.18%, 30.46%, and 3.64% of patients based on UO, compared with 33.72%, 4.60%, and 3.26% of patients using SCr, respectively. Continuous UO-based alerts diagnosed stage ≥1 AKI 33.6 (IQR =15.43, 95.68) hours before stage ≥2 identified by SCr criteria. A SCr-based diagnosis of AKI stage ≥2 has been designated a Hospital Harm by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Using this criterion as a benchmark, AKI alerts had a discriminative power of 0.78. The AKI Alert for stage 1 was significantly associated with increased intensive care unit and hospital length of stay and continuous renal replacement therapy, and stage ≥2 alerts were associated with mortality. Conclusions: AKI Alert, based on continuous UO and enabled by active drain line clearance, detected AKI stages 1 and 2 before SCr criteria. Early AKI detection allows for early kidney optimization, potentially improving patient outcomes.
KW - KDIGO
KW - active drain line clearance
KW - acute kidney injury
KW - cardiac surgery
KW - cardiac surgery–associated acute kidney injury
KW - intensive care unit
KW - serum creatinine
KW - urine output
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85198753732
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85198753732#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.1053/j.jvca.2024.06.021
DO - 10.1053/j.jvca.2024.06.021
M3 - Article
C2 - 39019742
AN - SCOPUS:85198753732
SN - 1053-0770
VL - 38
SP - 2238
EP - 2246
JO - Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia
JF - Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia
IS - 10
ER -