Back to Search Start Over

Characterising acute kidney injury: The complementary roles of biomarkers of renal stress and renal function

Authors :
Lui G, Forni
Michael, Joannidis
Antonio, Artigas
Max, Bell
Eric, Hoste
Olivier, Joannes-Boyau
Kianoush, Kashani
Jay, Koyner
Thomas, Rimmele
Jing, Shi
Marlies, Ostermann
Lakhmir S, Chawla
John A, Kellum
Source :
Journal of Critical Care. 71:154066
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Although epidemiological studies have enhanced our understanding of acute kidney injury, defining the biologic processes corresponding to the clinical phenotype remains challenging. We have examined biomarkers associated with renal stress plus markers of glomerular function to assess whether this approach may aid prediction of AKI or other relevant endpoints.Urinary [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7], serum creatinine, plasma cystatin C and plasma proenkephalin 119-159100 patients (14%) reached the primary endpoint. Markers of renal stress outperformed those associated with glomerular function. Combining [TIMP-2]•[IGFBP7] with serum creatinine, but not the other functional markers, significantly (p = 0.02) increased the area under the ROC curve (AUC) from 0.80 (0.76-0.84) to 0.85 (0.81-0.89). In patients who did not develop AKI, all markers of glomerular filtration, but not [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7], were significantly elevated in patients with a history of CKD (p0.05).The combination of cell-cycle arrest biomarkers, TIMP-2 and IGFBP7, with serum creatinine but not cystatin C or PENK improved risk stratification for the development of stage 2 or 3 AKI over [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7] alone.

Details

ISSN :
08839441
Volume :
71
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Critical Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8708477c42657f7d1e522ce2f3bde4c9