1.Acute kidney injury following coronary artery bypass graft surgery in a tertiary public hospital in Malaysia: an analysis of 1228 consecutive cases
Hiew Khee Chun ; Anand Sachithanandan ; Mohamad Arif Muhammad Nor ; Balaji Badmanaban ; Abdul Muiz Jasid ; Faisal Ismail ; Hamdan Leman ; Evi Diana Omar
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2016;71(3):126-130
Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) following cardiac
surgery is well established but the reported incidence is
variable due to varying definitions and criteria. Furthermore
there is a paucity of such data from Southeast Asia.
Objectives: To determine the incidence of AKI, the
associated risk factors, and its impact on early mortality and
intensive care unit/hospital stay.
Method: This is a single centre retrospective observational
study to evaluate outcomes on 1260 consecutive patients
from a multi-ethnic Southeast Asian population who
underwent a primary isolated coronary artery bypass graft
(CABG) operation. Data was collected from the hospital’s
electronic database and analysed using basic descriptive
statistics and logistic regression.
Results: Overall incidence was 36.2% including 5.5% of
patients who required renal replacement therapy (RRT).
Multivariate analysis identified age, insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus (IDDM), baseline serum creatinine level
(SCr), recent myocardial infarction (MI), cardiopulmonary
bypass (CPB) time and intra-aortic balloon pump (IABP) use
as independent risk factors for AKI. For patients who
required RRT, the SCr and IDDM remained independent
predictors. Early 30-day mortality (11.5% vs 0.9%) was
significantly higher in patients who developed AKI following
CABG. Similarly, AKI was associated with a slight but
statistically significant increase in intensive care unit (ICU)
and hospital stay.
Conclusion: Better prognostication and preventative
strategies are required to better risk stratify patients
undergoing CABG and optimise utilisation of limited
healthcare resources.
Acute Kidney Injury