Diagnosis and prognosis of acute renal injury in cardiac surgery using
combined biomarkers. Running head. Biomarkers of renal injury in cardiac
surgery.
Abstract
Objective: To determine the impact and usefulness of the combination of
structural and functional biomarkers in the diagnosis of acute renal
injury (AKI) and short-term prognosis of patients undergoing cardiac
surgery (CS). Material and Methods. Prospective cohort study (March 2018
to December 2019). 63 adults older than 18 years old, on the Intensive
Care Unit (ICU) were included. Interventions: Patients had undergone CS
with extracorporeal circulation (ECC). Surgery was elective in 80% of
cases; it was urgent in 18% and emergent in 3%. Exclusion criteria
included chronic kidney disease, contrast medium application ≤24 hour
before surgery, cancer, infectious and autoimmune diseases. On admission
to the ICU, serum creatinine, urinary creatinine, urinary sediment,
urinary NGAL, urinary cystatin, microalbuminuria and serum cystatin were
measured. Results. AKI was found 31 cases (49%). ECC without renal
damage was found when time of extracorporeal circulation was of 85 ± 25
minutes and with renal damage when it lasted 114 ± 32 (p = 0.0001).
Serum creatinine has a likelihood ratio (LR) + of 5.5, the combination
of serum cystatin c (cystatin C) and normalized NGAL, showed a better
LR. In patients with severe irreversible AKI, the combination of
cystatin C + NGAL adjusted to urinary creatinine (NGAL/uCr) +
microalbuminuria had a LR+ of 18.75 and LR - of 0.26. Conclusions: The
combination of biomarkers predicts and identifies severity of AKI and
Biomarkers combination in Cardiac Surgery