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Evaluation of Novel Biomarkers in Early Recognition of Acute Kidney Injury After Orthopedic Operations.

M

Medical University of Warsaw

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Hip Fractures
Acute Kidney Injury

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: RRI measurement
Diagnostic Test: Biomarker

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Surgical treatment of hip fracture may be complicated by acute kidney injury. The aim of this study is to investigate whether the investigators can find a better biomarker than creatinine to recognize this problem at an earlier stage.

Full description

Extensive orthopedic surgical procedures may have many postoperative complications. One of those, sometimes overlooked, is acute kidney injury. Classically defined by KDIGO criteria as an increase in creatinine concentration, may go by unnoticed due to a late peak in serum concentration of this marker. There is still need for "nephrological troponin" which could easily and with a low margin of doubt identify acute kidney injury.

The investigators have planned a double-center study, in cooperation with the 'Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Therapy with the Postoperative Subdivision' of the 'Samodzielny Publiczny Szpital Kliniczny im. prof. Adama Grucy CMKP' in Otwock, concentrating on measuring concentration of biomarkers known to indicate acute kidney injury in different situations: Proenkephalin (PENK), Dickkopf-3 (DKK3), circular RNA (circRNA), Liver-type Fatty Acid-binding Protein (L-FABP), Netrin-1, semaphorin 3a, Tissue Inhibitor of Matrix Metalloproteinase-2 (TIMP-2), Insulin-like Growth Factor-binding Protein 7 (IGFBP-7), Retinol-binding Protein-4 (RBP-4) aiming to find a marker, or group of markers that would allow recognition of renal injury at an early stage to help minimize the effect.

Patients aged at least 18 years, with a hip fracture undergoing, either hip alloplasty, or internal fixation, after providing informed consent, will be included. Patients with end stage renal disease will be excluded. Blood and urine samples will be collected at 5 points of time: 1 - after admission to the operating ward, 2 - following surgery, before leaving the operating ward, 3 - on the 1st postoperative day, 4 - on the 2nd postoperative day, 5 - on the 5th postoperative day, or the day the patient leaves hospital, whichever is first. Additionally patients who will be able to cooperate will have a renal resistive index measured using ultrasonography.

Blood collected from patients, not longer than 8 hours after collection will be tested for PENK concentration (Spingotec GmbH, Berlin, Germany), then plasma obtained from this sample after centrifuging will be frozen together with centrifugated samples of urine in -80 degrees Celsius till analysis.

Additionally, if the concentration of PENK is elevated, the same sample will be tested after 8, 12 and 24 hours of staying at room temperature, to define stability of the test from blood sampling till measurement.

30 days after surgery, an attempt to contact the patient or his/her family is going to be made, to check if the patient has developed need for renal replacement therapy or has required hospitalisation due to kidney dysfunction together with a 30 day mortality evaluation.

Enrollment

200 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • age at least 18 years
  • be able to provide informed consent

Exclusion criteria

  • end stage renal disease

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Przemysław Bolewski

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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