Defining pediatric community-acquired acute kidney injury: an observational study

Erika R. O’Neil*, Sridevi Devaraj, Lesby Mayorquin, Hannah E. Starke, Gregory J. Buffone, Laura L. Loftis, Ayse Akcan Arikan, Andrea T. Cruz

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Pediatric acute kidney injury (AKI) is associated with long-term morbidity and mortality; however, outcomes improve when AKI is detected earlier. Current definitions of AKI use baseline creatinine; community-acquired AKI (CA-AKI) is difficult to define and detect in the pediatric emergency department (ED) when no baseline creatinine is available. Our objective was to compare age- and gender-based creatinine norms to the traditional baseline (lowest creatinine in previous 3 months) to diagnose CA-AKI. Methods: This was a retrospective cross-sectional study conducted in children 1 month–18 years of age seen in the pediatric ED in whom a creatinine was obtained. Results: Per the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes AKI definition in encounters with baseline creatinine available, 343/2338 (14.7%) had CA-AKI. When the upper limit of the age- and gender-based creatinine norm was applied as a surrogate baseline creatinine, CA-AKI was diagnosed in 1.5% of encounters (239/15,486). Additionally, CA-AKI was diagnosed in 178 cases using the upper limit of age- and gender-based creatinine norms only, as these cases did not have a baseline creatinine. Conclusions: Age- and gender-based creatinine norms can be applied as a surrogate baseline to detect CA-AKI in all children regardless of whether baseline creatinine is available, potentially detecting it earlier.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)564-568
Number of pages5
JournalPediatric Research
Volume87
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Feb 2020

Cite this