Paucity of renal follow-up by school age after neonatal cardiac surgery

There are little data about renal follow-up of neonates after cardiovascular surgery and no guidelines for long-term renal follow-up. Our objectives were to assess renal function follow-up practice after neonatal cardiac surgery, evaluate factors that predict follow-up serum creatinine measurements...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cardiology in the young 2020-06, Vol.30 (6), p.822-828
Hauptverfasser: Rodriguez-Lopez, Sara, Huynh, Louis, Benisty, Kelly, Dancea, Adrian, Garros, Daniel, Hessey, Erin, Joffe, Ari, Mackie, Andrew, Palijan, Ana, Paun, Alex, Pizzi, Michael, Riglea, Teodora, Zappitelli, Michael, Morgan, Catherine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There are little data about renal follow-up of neonates after cardiovascular surgery and no guidelines for long-term renal follow-up. Our objectives were to assess renal function follow-up practice after neonatal cardiac surgery, evaluate factors that predict follow-up serum creatinine measurements including acute kidney injury following surgery, and evaluate the estimated glomerular filtration rate during follow-up using routinely collected laboratory values. Two-centre retrospective cohort study of children 5-7 years of age with a history of neonatal cardiac surgery. Univariable and multivariable analyses were performed to determine factors associated with post-discharge creatinine measurements. Glomerular filtration rate was estimated for each creatinine using a height-independent equation. Seventeen of 55 children (30%) did not have any creatinine measured following discharge after surgery until the end of study follow-up, which occurred at a median time of 6 years after discharge. Of the 38 children who had the kidney function checked, 15 (40%) had all of their creatinine drawn only in the context of a hospitalisation or emergency department visit. Acute kidney injury following surgery did not predict the presence of follow-up creatinine measurements. A large proportion of neonates undergoing congenital heart repair did not have a follow-up creatinine measured in the first years following surgery. In those that did have a creatinine measured, there did not appear to be any identified pattern of follow-up. A follow-up system for children who are discharged from cardiac surgery is needed to identify children with or at risk of chronic kidney disease.
ISSN:1047-9511
1467-1107
DOI:10.1017/S1047951120001067