Prognosis of hospitalized patients with cirrhosis and acute kidney disease

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Abstract

Background: The prognosis of acute kidney disease (AKD), defined as a glomerular filtration rate of <60 ml/min/1.73 m2 or a rise in serum creatinine (sCr) of <50% for <3 months, is not clearly known. Aim: To study the prevalence, predictive factors and clinical outcomes in hospitalized cirrhotic patients with AKD. Methods: The North American Consortium for the Study of End-Stage Liver Disease prospectively enrolled hospitalized decompensated cirrhotic patients. Patients were separated into those with normal renal function (controls or C), AKD or stage 1 AKI as their worst renal dysfunction per International Club of Ascites definition and compared. Parameters assessed included demographics, laboratory data, haemodynamics, renal and patient outcomes. Results: 1244 patients with cirrhosis and ascites (C: 704 or 57%; AKD: 176 or 14%; stage 1 AKI: 364 or 29%) with similar demographics were enrolled. AKD patients had similar baseline sCr but higher hospital admission in the previous 6 months, and higher peak sCr, compared to controls, with their peak sCr being lower than that in stage 1 AKI patients (all P

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Wong, F., Garcia-Tsao, G., Reddy, K. R., O’Leary, J. G., Kamath, P. S., Tandon, P., … Bajaj, J. S. (2022). Prognosis of hospitalized patients with cirrhosis and acute kidney disease. Liver International, 42(4), 896–904. https://doi.org/10.1111/liv.15154

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