Serum heart-type fatty acid-binding protein level can be used to detect acute kidney injury on admission and predict an adverse outcome in patients with acute heart failure

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Abstract

Background: Different mechanisms of acute kidney injury (AKI) may exist for acute heart failure (AHF) patients compared with other patients. Methods and Results: We analyzed data from 282 patients with AHF. The biomarkers were measured within 30 min of admission. Patients were assigned to a no-AKI (n=213) or AKI group (Class R (n=49), Class I (n=15) or Class F (n=5)) using the RIFLE classifications on admission. We evaluated the relationships between the biomarkers and AKI, in-hospital mortality, all-cause death and HF events (HF re-admission, all-cause death) within 90 days. The serum heart-type fatty acid-binding protein (s-HFABP) levels were significantly higher in the AKI than in the no-AKI group, and the predictive biomarker for AKI was s-HFABP (odds ratio: 6.709; 95% confidence interval: 3.362-13.391). s-HFABP demonstrated an optimal balance between sensitivity and specificity (71.0%, 79.3%; area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve [AUC]=0.790) at 22.8 ng/ml for AKI, at 22.8 ng/ml for Class I/F (90.0%, 71.4%; AUC=0.836) and at 21.0 ng/ml for in-hospital mortality (74.3%, 70.0%; AUC=0.726). The Kaplan-Meier survival curves showed a significantly poorer prognosis in the high s-HFABP group (>22.9 ng/ml) than in other groups. Conclusions: The s-HFABP level can indicate AKI on admission, and a high s-HFABP level is associated with a poorer prognosis for AHF patients. (Circ J 2015; 79: 119-128)

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Shirakabe, A., Hata, N., Kobayashi, N., Okazaki, H., Shinada, T., Tomita, K., … Shimizu, W. (2014). Serum heart-type fatty acid-binding protein level can be used to detect acute kidney injury on admission and predict an adverse outcome in patients with acute heart failure. Circulation Journal, 79(1), 119–128. https://doi.org/10.1253/circj.CJ-14-0653

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