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Clinico-Etiological Spectrum and Outcome in Patients With Septic Acute Kidney Injury and Its Comparison With Non-septic Acute Kidney Injury: A Hospital-Based Prospective Study Conducted in a Tertiary Care Hospital in North India.

Curēus 2023 April
Background Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a heterogenous syndrome defined by the impairment of kidney filtration and excretory function over days to weeks, resulting in the retention of nitrogenous and other waste products normally cleared by the kidneys. In addition, AKI is frequently recognized to be associated with sepsis and contributes to an unfavorable outcome in sepsis. This study was undertaken to study and compare the etiology and clinical profile of patients with septic and non-septic AKI and to study and compare the outcome in both groups. Materials and methods This is a prospective, observational, and comparative study with a total sample size of 200 patients selected randomly having sustained an acute kidney injury. Data was collected, recorded, analyzed, and compared for two groups of patients with septic and non-septic AKI. Results A total of 200 cases of AKI were enrolled, out of which 120 (60%) were due to non-septic etiology and 80 (40%) were of septic etiology. Urosepsis (37.5%) due to various urinary tract infections including pyelonephritis and chest sepsis (18.75%) including community-acquired pneumonia (CAP) and aspiration pneumonia were the predominant causes of sepsis. AKI secondary to nephrotoxic agents (27.5%) was the commonest cause in the non-septic group, followed by glomerulonephritis (13.3%), vitamin D intoxication-related hypercalcemia (12.5%), acute gastroenteritis (10.8%), etc. Patients of septic AKI had a significantly higher mean of maximum urea and creatinine than their non-septic AKI counterparts. In addition to having an increased duration of hospital stay, mortality was significantly higher in patients with septic AKI (27.5%) than in patients with non-septic AKI (4.1%). However, sepsis had no effect on renal functions, measured by urea and creatinine, at discharge. In patients with AKI, certain factors were found to increase the risk of mortality. These factors include being over 65 years old, needing mechanical ventilation or vasopressors, requiring renal replacement therapy (RRT), and having multiorgan dysfunction syndrome (MODS), septic shock, or acute coronary syndrome (ACS). However, pre-existing conditions such as diabetes, hypertension, malignancy, previous stroke, chronic kidney disease (CKD), and chronic liver disease (CLD) did not affect the overall mortality risk. Conclusion In the septic AKI group, urosepsis was the most frequent etiology of AKI, while the most frequent etiology of AKI in the non-septic group was nephrotoxin exposure. Patients with septic AKI had considerably longer hospital stays and greater in-hospital mortality rates than patients with non-septic AKI. The renal functions as determined by urea and creatinine at discharge were unaffected by sepsis. Finally, death was significantly impacted by age of >65 years, the necessity for mechanical ventilation, the use of vasopressors and RRT, and the presence of MODS, septic shock, and ACS.

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