Abstract
AbstractBackgroundThe risk of developing a persistent reduction in renal function after postoperative acute kidney injury (pAKI) is not well-established.ObjectivePerform a multi-center retrospective propensity matched study evaluating whether patients that develop pAKI have a greater decline in long-term renal function than patients that did not develop postoperative AKI.DesignMulti-center retrospective propensity matched study.SettingAnesthesia data warehouses at three tertiary care hospitals were queried.PatientsAdult patients undergoing surgery with available preoperative and postoperative creatinine results and without baseline hemodialysis requirements.MeasurementsThe primary outcome was a decline in follow-up glomerular filtration rate (GFR) of 40% relative to baseline, based on follow-up outpatient visits from 0-36 months after hospital discharge. A propensity score matched sample was used in Kaplan-Meier analysis and in a piecewise Cox model to compare time to first 40% decline in GFR for patients with and without pAKI.ResultsA total of 95,208 patients were included. The rate of pAKI ranged from 9.9% to 13.7%. In the piecewise Cox model, pAKI significantly increased the hazard of a 40% decline in GFR. The common effect hazard ratio was 13.35 (95% CI: 10.79 to 16.51, p<0.001) for 0-6 months, 7.07 (5.52 to 9.05, p<0.001) for 6-12 months, 6.02 (4.69 to 7.74, p<0.001) for 12-24 months, and 4.32 (2.65 to 7.05, p<0.001) for 24-36 months.LimitationsRetrospective; Patients undergoing ambulatory surgery without postoperative lab tests drawn before discharge were not captured; certain variables like postoperative urine output were not reliably available.ConclusionPostoperative AKI significantly increases the risk of a 40% decline in GFR up to 36 months after the index surgery across three institutions.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory