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Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a frequent complication after cardiac surgery. Its incidence ranges from 19 to 44% depending on the study and which definition is used: Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) classification or RIFLE criteria (Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss, End-Stage Kidney Disease) based on serum creatinine and urine output.
AKI is associated with increased mortality, more complications, a longer stay in the intensive care unit and hospital, and increased health care costs. Moreover, the patients who require renal replacement therapy (RRT) have the highest mortality and complications1.The mortality risk in patients developing acute renal dysfunction after cardiac surgery increases by approximately 40%, while the overall mortality rate after cardiac surgery ranges between 2% and 8%.
There are some well-known risk factors associated with AKI, including baseline patient characteristics (age and comorbidities), need of perioperative blood transfusion or presence of previous chronic kidney disease. The main objective of this study is to evaluate if a nephrologist management and control of potential risk factors of renal disease can be used to prevent AKI, thereby minimizing the risk of need RRT, reducing costs and improving survival in this patients.
Full description
Aim The aim of this study is to assess if a nephrology intervention before cardiac surgery can reduce the postoperative incidence of AKI (Acute Kidney Injury).
Methods Trial design and participants Recruitment: unicentric Ethics approval: Clinical Research Ethics Committee of Bellvitge will have approved the study before initiation. All patients will give written informed consent. Patients will be able to withdraw informed consent.
Duration of the study: 3 years recruitment, 1 year follow-up.
Randomization
Eligible patients will be randomly assigned by using sequentially numbered, opaque, sealed envelopes. Patients will be allocated to one of two groups using shuffled envelopes at the moment of the first visit of the cardiac surgeon. The two groups will be:
Nephrology intervention before surgery, which will include:
pre-operative study:
optimise the patient' s overall condition with a pre-operative strategy:
No nephrology intervention before surgery (standard of care) Treatment allocation will be know by the clinician entering the patient into the trial at the moment the envelope will be opened.
Blinding Open study. If it appears a clinical situation that force the clinician to change the patient allocation group (e.g. acute kidney injury or advanced chronic kidney disease not known before which requires some treatment), an intention-to-treat analysis will be made considering the results of the patient in the initial assigned group.
Procedures
Baseline data recorded:
Operative factors:
Follow up: Clinical and analytical assessment will be carried out at discharge, 4 and 12 months after surgery by the cardiac surgeon and nephrologist.
Sample size: The number of participants required in each group is calculated with 80% power and 5% significance: 9
•n= 550 per group --> considering a difference of 5% in people presenting AKI between people without nephrologist intervention before surgery (12,2%) and those without intervention (7,2%)
Parameters that will be measured:
Postoperative day 1 will be defined as the period up to 12pm on the day after surgery, day 2 as the period until 12pm on the subsequent day, and so on.
Statistical analysis An intention-to-treat analysis will be performed considering the results of the patient in the initial assigned group. The outcome data will be measured in all participants (if there is missing data it will be reported and imputed using appropriate methods such as: treating these as if they were observed (e.g. last observation carried forward) Unless otherwise stated, p values and estimates of treatment effects will be based on two-way comparisons.
Continuous variables will be compared between groups using Student's t test or Wilcoxon rank test. Categorical variables will be compared using X2 or Fisher exact test. Subgroup analysis will be performed considering different stages of previous kidney disease and different kind of cardiac surgeries. Survival will be analyzed using Kaplan-Meier and Cox models.
Statistical analysis using SPSS software will be performed.
Ethical issues The trial will be stopped (without one year follow-up) if the in-hospital AKI outcomes are negative (defining that there is more than 25% of differences between groups).
This study has already been approved by the Ethics committee of the Hospital Universitari de Bellvitge on the 10th of July of 2014.
Interim analysis and stopping rules The interim analysis will not be published previously and the stopping rules will be that any patient who do not want to participate in the study, will be dropped-out without any impediment. There will not be an independent data-monitoring committee.
Indemnities: none Publication plan: Results will be published in an international journal. Funder : no funding.
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410 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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