Reducing Acute Kidney Injury Due to Contrast Material: How Nurses Can Improve Patient Safety

Author:

Lambert Peggy1,Chaisson Kristine2,Horton Susan3,Petrin Carmen1,Marshall Emily4,Bowden Sue1,Scott Lynn1,Conley Sheila5,Stender Janette5,Kent Gertrude6,Hopkins Ellen6,Smith Brian7,Nicholson Anita7,Roy Nancy3,Homsted Brenda8,Downs Cindy8,Ross Cathy S.9,Brown Jeremiah4

Affiliation:

1. Peggy Lambert is executive director of critical care services, Sue Bowden is a nurse, and Carmen Petrin and Lynn Scott are nurse practitioners at Catholic Medical Center, Manchester, New Hampshire.

2. Kristine Chaisson is a nurse and executive director of the Central Maine Heart and Vascular Center, Central Maine Medical Center, Lewiston, Maine.

3. Susan Horton is a nurse and cardiac director and Nancy Roy is the nurse manager of the cardiac intensive care unit, Central Maine Medical Center.

4. Jeremiah Brown is an associate professor and Emily Marshall is a research assistant, Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice, Geisel School of Medicine, the Department of Medicine, and the Department of Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, Lebanon, New Hampshire. He is the principal investigator of the quality improvement project.

5. Sheila Conley is a nurse database manager and Janette Stender is a cardiovascular medicine nurse practitioner at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.

6. Ellen Hopkins and Gertrude Kent are ambulatory cardiac care nurses, Maine Medical Center, Portland, Maine.

7. Anita Nicholson is a cardiac catheterization nurse and Brian Smith is a cardiac catheterization technician, Wentworth Douglass Hospital, Dover, New Hampshire.

8. Cindy Downs and Brenda Homsted are nurses, Eastern Maine Medical Center, Bangor, Maine.

9. Cathy S. Ross is administrative director, Northern New England Cardiovascular Disease Study Group and manager of research projects at Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Acute kidney injury due to contrast material occurs in 3% to 15% of the 2 million cardiac catheterizations done in the United States each year. OBJECTIVE To reduce acute kidney injury due to contrast material after cardiovascular interventional procedures. METHODS Nurse leaders in the Northern New England Cardiovascular Disease Study Group, a 10-center quality improvement consortium in Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, formed a nursing task force to reduce acute kidney injury due to contrast material after cardiovascular interventional procedures. Data were prospectively collected January 1, 2007, through June 30, 2012, on consecutive nonemergent patients (n = 20 147) undergoing percutaneous coronary interventions. RESULTS Compared with baseline rates, adjusted rates of acute kidney injury among the 10 centers were significantly reduced by 21% and by 28% in patients with baseline estimated glomerular filtration rate less than 60 mL/min per 1.73 m2. Key qualitative system factors associated with improvement included use of multidisciplinary teams, standardized fluid orders, use of an intravenous fluid bolus, patient education about oral hydration, and limiting the volume of contrast material. CONCLUSIONS Standardization of evidence-based best practices in nursing care may reduce the incidence of acute kidney injury due to contrast material.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

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