Jean Zhuo Wang, Lindsey Sikora, Peter Farrell, Swapnil Hiremath, Edward G Clark
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Hemodynamic instability related to renal replacement therapy (HIRRT) is a common complication affecting critically ill patients that require renal replacement therapy (RRT). There is currently no consensus regarding the definition of HIRRT in critically ill patients. In this context, the impacts of HIRRT on clinical outcomes such as mortality or renal recovery in critically ill patients are unclear.
Objective: The primary objective of this proposed systematic review is to evaluate the association between HIRRT and clinical outcomes, as reported within randomized control trials in the literature. The secondary objective of this systematic review is to compare rates of HIRRT, according to various definitions used by randomized controlled trials, across different RRT modalities used to treat critically ill patients, with the goal of paving the way toward a common definition of HIRRT for future research.
Design: Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Measurements: The rates of HIRRT, mortality, and renal recovery will be reported according to each definition of HIRRT.
Patients: Critically-ill adults with acute kidney injury admitted to intensive care units.
Methods: The search strategy will be developed to identify articles in Medline, MEDLINE In-Process, EMBASE, and Cochrane CENTRAL Registry. We will include randomized control trials examining renal replacement therapy in critically ill patients. This will include intermittent hemodialysis (iHD), all forms of prolonged intermittent RRT (PIRRT), and continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT). Only articles that report a definition of HIRRT and the rates of HIRRT will be included in our analysis. Two reviewers will independently screen all articles for inclusion and exclusion. Data extraction and quality assessment will be also performed in duplicate. All disagreements will be resolved through discussion or a third reviewer.
Limitations: The heterogeneity in the definitions of HIRRT and outcome reporting may limit the ability to perform meta-analysis and perform comparisons in the rates of HIRRT between RRT modalities.
Conclusions: This systematic review aims to assess the association between HIRRT and important clinical outcomes. In doing so, we will identify definitions of HIRRT within the current literature and the rates of HIRRT associated with these definitions. HIRRT can result in early discontinuation of dialysis, organ injury from hypoperfusion, and may negatively impact mortality and renal recovery in critically ill patients. This systematic review will synthesize the impact and frequency of HIRRT reported in the literature and, in doing so, may help determine the extent to which common definitions of HIRRT might be recommended for standardized use in future research related to HIRRT.
背景:肾替代治疗(hrrt)相关血流动力学不稳定是影响需要肾替代治疗(RRT)的危重患者的常见并发症。目前对于危重患者hrt的定义尚无共识。在这种情况下,hrt对危重患者的临床结果,如死亡率或肾脏恢复的影响尚不清楚。目的:本系统综述的主要目的是评估文献中随机对照试验中报道的hrrt与临床结果之间的关系。本系统综述的次要目的是根据随机对照试验中使用的各种定义,比较用于治疗危重患者的不同RRT模式下的hirt率,目的是为未来研究中hirt的共同定义铺平道路。设计:系统回顾和荟萃分析。测量方法:将根据hrt的每个定义报告hrt的比率、死亡率和肾脏恢复。患者:重症监护病房的急性肾损伤危重成人。方法:将制定搜索策略来识别Medline、Medline in - process、EMBASE和Cochrane CENTRAL Registry中的文章。我们将纳入随机对照试验,检查危重患者的肾脏替代疗法。这将包括间歇性血液透析(iHD),所有形式的延长间歇性RRT (PIRRT)和持续肾脏替代治疗(CRRT)。只有报告了hrt定义和hrt发生率的文章才会被纳入我们的分析。两名审稿人将独立筛选所有文章的纳入和排除。数据提取和质量评估也将一式两份进行。所有分歧将通过讨论或第三方审稿人解决。局限性:hrt定义和结果报告的异质性可能会限制进行荟萃分析和在不同RRT方式之间进行hrt率比较的能力。结论:本系统综述旨在评估hrrt与重要临床结果之间的关系。在此过程中,我们将确定当前文献中hirt的定义以及与这些定义相关的hirt发生率。hrt可导致早期停止透析,低灌注造成器官损伤,并可能对危重患者的死亡率和肾脏恢复产生负面影响。这一系统综述将综合文献中报道的hrt的影响和频率,这样做可能有助于确定在何种程度上推荐hrt的共同定义,以便在未来与hrt相关的研究中标准化使用。系统评价注册:PROSPERO注册号:CRD42023396550。
期刊介绍:
Canadian Journal of Kidney Health and Disease, the official journal of the Canadian Society of Nephrology, is an open access, peer-reviewed online journal that encourages high quality submissions focused on clinical, translational and health services delivery research in the field of chronic kidney disease, dialysis, kidney transplantation and organ donation. Our mandate is to promote and advocate for kidney health as it impacts national and international communities. Basic science, translational studies and clinical studies will be peer reviewed and processed by an Editorial Board comprised of geographically diverse Canadian and international nephrologists, internists and allied health professionals; this Editorial Board is mandated to ensure highest quality publications.