Use of Aminophylline to Reverse Acute Kidney Injury in Pediatric Critical Care Patients

Author:

Radel Laura J.1,Branstetter Joshua2,Jones Tamekia L.3,Briceno-Medina Mario1,Tadphale Sachin D.1,Onder Ali Mirza4,Rayburn Mark S.25

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatric Cardiology (LJR, MBM, SDT), Le Bonheur Children's Hospital and University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN

2. Department of Pharmacy (MSR), Le Bonheur Children's Hospital and University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, TN

3. Department of Pediatrics and Preventive Medicine (TLJ), University of Tennessee Health Science Center and Children's Foundation Research Institute, Memphis, TN

4. Department of Nephrology (AMO), Children's of Mississippi and University of Mississippi Medical Campus, Jackson, MS

5. Department of Clinical Pharmacy and Translational Science (MSR), University of Tennessee Health Science Center and Children's Foundation Research Institute, Memphis, TN

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a complication encountered in 18% to 51% of pediatric critical care patients admitted for treatment of other primary diagnoses and is an independent risk factor for increased morbidity and mortality. Aminophylline has shown promise as a medication to treat AKI, but published studies have shown conflicting results. Our study seeks to assess the reversal of AKI following the administration of aminophylline in critically ill pediatric patients. METHODS We performed a single-institution retrospective chart review of pediatric inpatients who were diagnosed with AKI and subsequently treated with non-continuous dose aminophylline between January 2016 and December 2018. Data were collected beginning 2 days prior to the initial dose of aminophylline through completion of the 5-day aminophylline course. RESULTS Nineteen therapies among 17 patients were included in analysis. Twelve of the therapies resulted in resolution of AKI during the study period. We observed urine output increase of 19% (p = 0.0063) on the day following initiation of aminophylline therapy in the subset of patients whose AKI resolved. Trends toward decreased serum creatinine and lower inotropic support were also noted. CONCLUSIONS Based on these findings, aminophylline could be considered a potentially effective medication for use as rescue therapy in critically ill children with AKI. Limitations include small study population and retrospective nature. Further research in this area with a larger study population and a randomized control trial would allow for better characterization of the efficacy of aminophylline in reversal of AKI.

Publisher

Pediatric Pharmacy Advocacy Group

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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