Acute kidney injury incidence and acute renal replacement modality in intensive care unit patients in Indonesia: A result from Southeast Asia-Acute Kidney Injury Study

Autor: Venna Febrian Kusumaningrum, Jonny Jonny, Moch Hasyim, Vedora Angelia, Nattachai Srisawat, Ayu Nursantisuryani Jahya, Lydia Permata Hilman
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
DOI: 10.21203/rs.2.24585/v1
Popis: Background : Currently, there is limited data of large databases of acute kidney injury (AKI) epidemiology from Southeast Asia, especially in Indonesia, the biggest countries in. Therefore, we aimed to provide demographic data of intensive care unit (ICU) patients with AKI and the utilization of renal replacement therapy (RRT) in Indonesia. Methods : We collected demographic and clinical data from 952 ICU patients. Patients were classified into AKI and non-AKI. AKI was classified according to the Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcome (KDIGO) criteria in three stages. We then assess the Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation (APACHE) II score of AKI and non-AKI patients. RRT modalities were listed down by the number of procedures conducted. Results : Overall incidence of AKI was 43%, distributed among three stages: 18.5 % stage 1, 33% stage 2, 48.5 % stage 3. Patients developing AKI need mechanical ventilation more often in comparison with non-AKI. Patients with AKI have an average APACHE score of 16.5, while non-AKI patients have an average score of 9.9. Among AKI patients, 24.6% requires RRT. The most common RRT modalities were intermittent hemodialysis (69.4%), followed by slow low efficiency dialysis (22.1%), continuous renal replacement therapy (4.2%), and peritoneal dialysis (1.1%). Conclusions: This study showed that AKI is a common problem in Indonesian ICU with containing a high mortality rate. We strongly believe that identification the risk factor of AKI will provide the opportunity to develop the predictability score for AKI prevention and finally improve AKI outcome.
Databáze: OpenAIRE