Kidney international
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Kidney international · Apr 2019
Disparate outcomes observed within Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) acute kidney injury stage 1.
The 2012 Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) clinical practice guideline classifies acute kidney injury (AKI) into 3 stages defined by serum creatinine elevation or urine output decline. We evaluated the potential impact of further categorizing AKI stage 1 into two stages based on serum creatinine criteria, with a focus on how the resulting 4-stage classification would affect the association of AKI stages with clinical outcomes. We defined AKI stage 1a as an absolute increase in serum creatinine of 0.3 mg/dl within 48 hours and stage 1b as a 50% relative increase in serum creatinine within 7 days. ⋯ Compared to patients with no AKI, the odds of in-hospital mortality were progressively higher for patients with higher AKI stages (odds ratio 4.3 for patients with stage 1a, 10.9 for stage 1b, 40.6 for stage 2, and 60.0 for stage 3 AKI). Patients with AKI stages 1a and 1b experienced clinically meaningful and statistically significant differences in length of stay and mortality. This study suggests that a modified 4-stage version of the KDIGO AKI classification may provide additional prognostic information.