Long-term outcomes of community-acquired versus hospital-acquired acute kidney injury: A retrospective analysis

46Citations
Citations of this article
51Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Aim: To compare long-term outcomes in CA-AKI to HA-AKI. The hypothesis was that renal and patient survival would be better in CA-AKI than in HA-AKI. Methods: Retrospective cohort analysis of patients hospitalized from 2004 to 2005, in Upstate New York Veterans Affairs hospitals. The groups: CA-AKI (n = 560), HA-AKI (n = 158), or No AKI (NA) (n = 2,320). Risk, injury, failure, loss, and end-stage kidney (RIFLE) criterion was used to define AKI. Primary outcomes: doubling of serum creatinine, endstage renal disease (ESRD), death, and a composite of the three. Secondary outcomes: de novo chronic kidney disease (CKD), recovery of renal function, and re-admission rate. The cumulative incidence of outcomes was determined over a period of 3 years after discharge. Results: CA-AKI was 3.5 times as prevalent as HA-AKI. In comparison to patients with HA-AKI, those with CA-AKI had better estimated glomerular filtration rate (71.3 vs. 61.1 mL/min/1.73 m2, p < 0.001) and lower prevalence of CKD (42.3 vs. 51.9%, p = 0.03) at baseline. More patients with CA-AKI than HA-AKI met RIFLE failure criterion (43.8 vs. 29.1%, p < 0.001). By 3 years, no differences were found for the individual primary and secondary outcomes tested (all p > 0.05). Conclusions: CA-AKI was found to be considerably more common than HA-AKI and had similar long-term consequences. © 2014 Dustri-Verlag Dr. K. Feistle.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Der Mesropian, P. J., Kalamaras, J. S., Eisele, G., Phelps, K. R., Asif, A., & Mathew, R. O. (2014). Long-term outcomes of community-acquired versus hospital-acquired acute kidney injury: A retrospective analysis. Clinical Nephrology, 81(3), 174–184. https://doi.org/10.5414/CN108153

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free