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Defining the Cause of Death in Hospitalised Patients with Acute Kidney Injury
Authors:Nicholas M Selby  Nitin V Kolhe  Christopher W McIntyre  John Monaghan  Nigel Lawson  David Elliott  Rebecca Packington  Richard J Fluck
Institution:1. Department of Renal Medicine, Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, United Kingdom.; 2. School of Graduate Entry Medicine and Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.; 3. Department of Chemical Pathology, Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, United Kingdom.; 4. Department of Informatics, Royal Derby Hospital, Derby, United Kingdom.; University of Sao Paulo Medical School, Brazil,
Abstract:

Background

The high mortality rates that follow the onset of acute kidney injury (AKI) are well recognised. However, the mode of death in patients with AKI remains relatively under-studied, particularly in general hospitalised populations who represent the majority of those affected. We sought to describe the primary cause of death in a large group of prospectively identified patients with AKI.

Methods

All patients sustaining AKI at our centre between 1st October 2010 and 31st October 2011 were identified by real-time, hospital-wide, electronic AKI reporting based on the Acute Kidney Injury Network (AKIN) diagnostic criteria. Using this system we are able to generate a prospective database of all AKI cases that includes demographic, outcome and hospital coding data. For those patients that died during hospital admission, cause of death was derived from the Medical Certificate of Cause of Death.

Results

During the study period there were 3,930 patients who sustained AKI; 62.0% had AKI stage 1, 20.6% had stage 2 and 17.4% stage 3. In-hospital mortality rate was 21.9% (859 patients). Cause of death could be identified in 93.4% of cases. There were three main disease categories accounting for three quarters of all mortality; sepsis (41.1%), cardiovascular disease (19.2%) and malignancy (12.9%). The major diagnosis leading to sepsis was pneumonia, whilst cardiovascular death was largely a result of heart failure and ischaemic heart disease. AKI was the primary cause of death in only 3% of cases.

Conclusions

Mortality associated with AKI remains high, although cause of death is usually concurrent illness. Specific strategies to improve outcomes may therefore need to target not just the management of AKI but also the most relevant co-existing conditions.
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