Kyle C. White , Jason Meyer , Kevin B. Laupland , Siva Senthuran , Kiran Shekar , James McCullough , Rinaldo Bellomo , On behalf of the Queensland Critical Care Research Network (QCRCN)
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Serum creatinine measured by point-of-care testing (CrP) correlates with central laboratory serum creatinine (CrC) measurement and can be performed frequently, which might lead to an earlier diagnosis of acute kidney injury (AKI). We aimed to test whether the combination of CrP and CrC measurement would achieve earlier and more freuent AKI diagnosis than routine CrC testing alone.
Methods
Retrospective study of critically ill patients with two or more CrP measurements 24 h before an AKI was diagnosed on CrC.
Results
1591 patients with a median APACHE 3 score of 67 (IQR 52-85) and a median number of CrP of 5 (IQR 3-6) measurements. The median individual differences in time to AKI diagnosis between CrC and CrP was −5 h (−11-−1). As the number of point-of-care tests increased in the 24 h before CrC-defined AKI diagnosis, the difference in hours increased (−3 (IQR −6-−1) to −8 (IQR −13– −2); p < 0.001). Compared to CrC alone, the use of both CrC and CrP detected more increases in AKI severity to each AKI stage (stage 1: 1767 (34 %) vs 1.170 (30 %); stage 2: 1.301 (25 %) vs 809 (21 %) and stage 3: 2071 (40 %) vs 1920 (49 %); p < 0.001).
Conclusion
Combined with CrC, CrP measurement resulted in the earlier diagnosis of AKI during ICU admission. Compared to CrC alone, using CrP measurements in combination with CrC was also associated with a higher maximum AKI stage and more detection of worsening AKI.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Critical Care, the official publication of the World Federation of Societies of Intensive and Critical Care Medicine (WFSICCM), is a leading international, peer-reviewed journal providing original research, review articles, tutorials, and invited articles for physicians and allied health professionals involved in treating the critically ill. The Journal aims to improve patient care by furthering understanding of health systems research and its integration into clinical practice.
The Journal will include articles which discuss:
All aspects of health services research in critical care
System based practice in anesthesiology, perioperative and critical care medicine
The interface between anesthesiology, critical care medicine and pain
Integrating intraoperative management in preparation for postoperative critical care management and recovery
Optimizing patient management, i.e., exploring the interface between evidence-based principles or clinical insight into management and care of complex patients
The team approach in the OR and ICU
System-based research
Medical ethics
Technology in medicine
Seminars discussing current, state of the art, and sometimes controversial topics in anesthesiology, critical care medicine, and professional education
Residency Education.