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The Use of Automated Electronic Alerts in Studying Short-Term Outcomes Associated with Community-Acquired Acute Kidney Injury.

Nephron2016IF: 2.9

Adil M Hazara, Musab Elgaali, Sarah Naudeer, Stephen Holding, Sunil Bhandari

PMID: 28030861View on PubMedDOI

Abstract

The use of electronic alerts (e-alerts) may increase the detection rate of acute kidney injury (AKI) since they are sensitive to small changes in serum creatinine. Our aim was to follow-up a cohort of patients presenting to hospital from the community with AKI (community-acquired AKI [c-AKI]), detected through the use of e-alerts, and describe their short-term outcomes regardless of whether they were subsequently admitted to hospital. Blood samples for all hospital attenders from the community either to the Accidents and Emergency department or one of the acute care areas of the hospital during a 6-month period (November 1, 2013-April 30, 2014) were screened for presence of c-AKI using a locally developed e-alerts system based on Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes criteria. Follow-up data were obtained for a period of 3 months. A total of 1,277 c-AKI episodes were identified in 1,185 patients (incidence 579 per 100,000 persons). Episodes that lead to hospitalization (n = 1,096 [86%]) were associated with a median length of hospital stay of 6.6 days; a graded increase in duration of stay was noted with increasing severity of AKI. Acute dialysis was needed during 21 (1.6%) episodes. For mortality rates, only the first AKI episode was considered. There were 298 deaths within 30 days of diagnosis irrespective of admissions status (30-day mortality rate: 25%). Using e-alerts in acute care settings to detect c-AKI is novel and may be used to stage and follow-up AKI using existing diagnostic criteria. c-AKI is relatively common and leads to significant mortality.

Specialty

Nephrology

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