Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
This is a multinational, prospective, observational study designed to characterize patient demographics, prescription parameters, and process measures of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) in intensive care units (ICUs) worldwide. The study aims to examine similarities and differences in CRRT practices and outcomes among critically ill adult patients across a global network of medical centers.
The goal is to develop a large, comprehensive repository of data on CRRT practices and outcomes. This repository will enable characterization of variation in standard CRRT practices across medical centers. Natural variability in practice patterns-both between and within centers-will provide an opportunity to compare outcomes associated with different approaches and to generate high-quality preliminary data to inform future interventional trials.
Primary Objective
- To describe global patient characteristics, CRRT modalities, and clinical outcomes among patients receiving CRRT.
Secondary Objectives
Exploratory Objectives
Study Population All patients receiving CRRT as part of routine clinical care in the ICU at participating centers will be eligible for inclusion.
Data Collection The study will support an epidemiological assessment of patients undergoing CRRT, including, but not limited to, demographics, underlying disease states, severity of illness, physiological support, indications for CRRT, and clinical outcomes. Outcomes of interest include ICU and hospital mortality, ICU and hospital length of stay, and renal recovery.
Full description
1.0 Rationale The goal of this study is to develop a large repository of data on CRRT practices and outcomes, enabling characterization of similarities and differences in standard CRRT practices across medical centers. Natural variability in practices will provide an opportunity to compare outcomes associated with different practice patterns and generate important preliminary data to inform future interventional trials.
2.0 Background Despite the accumulation of high-quality evidence, the prescription, delivery, and maintenance of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) remain highly variable across clinical settings. This persistent heterogeneity reflects uncertainty in key aspects of CRRT practice and underscores the need for a comprehensive, international evaluation. The international CRRT (iCRRT) initiative was established to systematically characterize global CRRT practices, identify regional variation, and inform strategies to optimize the delivery of this life-sustaining therapy for critically ill patients.
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is among the most common and severe complications encountered in critical illness, affecting more than half of patients admitted to intensive care units (ICUs). Approximately 6% of ICU patients require renal replacement therapy (RRT), a subgroup in whom hospital mortality remains exceedingly high, frequently approaching or exceeding 50%. Although AKI is associated with substantial morbidity, mortality, and healthcare utilization, no interventions have been shown to consistently reverse established kidney injury. Management, therefore, remains largely supportive, with RRT reserved for patients with advanced or refractory disease.
For critically ill patients, particularly those with hemodynamic instability, CRRT has become the predominant RRT modality in many high-income countries. Since the original description of continuous arteriovenous hemofiltration more than three decades ago, technological and procedural advances have transformed CRRT into a widely adopted and routinely applied therapy. Compared with intermittent hemodialysis (IHD), CRRT offers superior hemodynamic tolerance, continuous solute control, and more precise fluid management. These perceived advantages form the basis of the 2012 Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) guidelines, which recommend CRRT over intermittent modalities in hemodynamically unstable patients . Nevertheless, despite its central role in contemporary critical care, substantial variation in CRRT practice persists across institutions and individual providers.
At the same time, there is increasing recognition that traditional clinical outcomes alone may incompletely capture the impact of critical illness and its treatments. Evidence increasingly supports the routine use of patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) to improve patient-clinician communication, enhance patient satisfaction, and positively influence health-related quality of life (HRQL). In this context, the Alberta-based EMPATHY study is evaluating the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of systematic PROMs collection in chronic RRT programs, examining associations with patient experience, clinical outcomes, HRQL, and healthcare utilization.
Despite existing guideline recommendations-most notably regarding target effluent dose and the preferential use of regional citrate anticoagulation - guidance remains limited for many fundamental components of CRRT delivery, including modality selection, anticoagulation protocols, electrolyte supplementation, and fluid balance strategies. This lack of consensus reflects the limited strength of the current evidence base, which is largely derived from small, single-center studies. Moreover, despite the high-risk nature of patients receiving CRRT, quality indicators and patient safety outcomes related to CRRT delivery have been insufficiently studied.
In this context, the investigators describe the protocol for a prospective observational study designed to evaluate CRRT practices among critically ill adult patients across an international consortium of medical centers. The primary objective is to establish a large, multicenter repository capturing patient characteristics, CRRT prescription and delivery patterns, and associated clinical outcomes. By leveraging natural variation in practice across healthcare systems, this study aims to generate robust comparative data and provide a foundation for the design of future interventional trials aimed at improving CRRT care and outcomes worldwide.
3.0 Research Question What are the similarities and differences in CRRT practices and outcomes among critically ill adult patients across a network of global medical centres?
4.0 Objectives Primary Objective
-To describe global patient characteristics, CRRT modalities, and clinical outcomes among patients receiving CRRT.
Secondary Objectives
Exploratory Objectives
5.0 Methods Design and Setting This is a multinational, prospective, observational study designed to characterize patient demographics, prescription parameters, and process measures of continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) in intensive care units (ICUs) worldwide.
Study Population The study will be conducted in ICUs at participating centers globally. All critically ill patients receiving CRRT as part of routine ICU care will be eligible for inclusion. Inclusion criteria are intentionally broad to capture a systems-level population suitable for evaluating practice patterns and outcomes.
Inclusion Criteria
Sample Size No formal sample size calculation will be performed. All eligible patients will be included.
Interventions CRRT administered as part of routine ICU care. This is an observational study; no study-related clinical interventions will be performed, and no biospecimens will be collected.
Data Collection A comprehensive range of data will be collected, including patient characteristics at enrolment, CRRT modalities and treatment courses, fluid balance, medications, and clinical outcomes. Electronic medical records will serve as the primary data source.
Each site will assign a de-identified patient identification number through the registry database; no direct patient identifiers will be uploaded. Sites without electronic medical records may manually enter de-identified data into a secure, password-protected, web-based interface. All electronic data transmission will use encryption technology to ensure data privacy and security.
The registry will comply with applicable privacy regulations, including the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA; 45 CFR Parts 160 and 164), including provisions related to de-identified data and limited data sets.
All sites will use standardized electronic case report forms. Measurement units will be customized to reflect local laboratory reporting practices, with automatic conversion and storage of values in standardized units for centralized analysis.
Statistical Analysis Data will be summarized using standard descriptive statistical methods. Associations between patient characteristics, CRRT initiation and prescription parameters, and clinical outcomes (including mortality, length of stay, and duration of AKI) will be evaluated using analysis of variance (ANOVA) for normally distributed variables or the Kruskal-Wallis test for non-normally distributed variables. Multivariable models will be developed, including variables with a univariate significance level of p < 0.20 and/or based on clinical relevance as determined by investigators judgment. Additional analyses will be conducted to address specific research questions as they arise.
Primary Outcomes An epidemiological assessment of patients undergoing CRRT, including, but not limited to, demographics, disease states, severity of illness, physiological support, indications for CRRT, and clinical outcomes. Outcomes include ICU and hospital mortality, ICU and hospital length of stay, and renal recovery.
Enrollment
Sex
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
100,000 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Central trial contact
Fadi Hammal, MD MSc; Oleksa Rewa, MD MSc FRCPC
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal