Long-Term Preservation of Renal Function in Septic Shock Burn Patients Requiring Renal Replacement Therapy for Acute Kidney Injury

The real impact of septic shock-associated acute kidney injury (AKI) on the long-term renal outcome is still debated, and little is known about AKI-burn patients. In a cohort of burn survivors treated by continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) and sorbent technology (CPFA-CRRT), we investigated...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical medicine 2021-12, Vol.10 (24), p.5760
Hauptverfasser: Mariano, Filippo, De Biase, Consuelo, Hollo, Zsuzsanna, Deambrosis, Ilaria, Davit, Annalisa, Mella, Alberto, Bergamo, Daniela, Maffei, Stefano, Rumbolo, Francesca, Papaleo, Alberto, Stella, Maurizio, Biancone, Luigi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The real impact of septic shock-associated acute kidney injury (AKI) on the long-term renal outcome is still debated, and little is known about AKI-burn patients. In a cohort of burn survivors treated by continuous renal replacement therapy (CRRT) and sorbent technology (CPFA-CRRT), we investigated the long-term outcome of glomerular and tubular function. Out of 211 burn patients undergoing CRRT from 2001 to 2017, 45 survived, 40 completed the clinical follow-up (cumulative observation period 4067 months, median 84 months, IR 44-173), and 30 were alive on 31 December 2020. Besides creatinine and urine albumin, in the 19 patients treated with CPFA-CRRT, we determined the normalized GFR by 99mTc-DTPA (NRI-GFR) and studied glomerular and tubular urine protein markers. At the follow-up endpoint, the median plasma creatinine and urine albumin were 0.99 (0.72-1.19) and 0.0 mg/dL (0.0-0.0), respectively. NRI-GFR was 103.0 mL/min (93.4-115). Four patients were diabetic, and 22/30 presented at least one risk factor for chronic disease (hypertension, dyslipidemia, and overweight). Proteinuria decreased over time, from 0.47 g/day (0.42-0.52) at 6 months to 0.134 g/day (0.09-0.17) at follow-up endpoint. Proteinuria positively correlated with the peak of plasma creatinine ( 0.6953, 0.006) and the number of CRRT days ( 0.5650, 0.035) during AKI course, and negatively with NRI-GFR ( -0.5545, 0.049). In seven patients, urine protein profile showed a significant increase of glomerular marker albumin and glomerular/tubular index. Burn patients who experienced septic shock and AKI treated with CRRT had a long-term expectation of preserved renal function. However, these patients were more predisposed to microalbuminuria, diabetes, and the presence of risk factors for intercurrent comorbidities and chronic renal disease.
ISSN:2077-0383
2077-0383
DOI:10.3390/jcm10245760