collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/36247057/impact-of-early-nephrology-referral-on-the-outcomes-of-patients-with-acute-kidney-injury
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maha K Alghamdi, Hanadi M Alhozali, Omar A Bokhary, Renad A Ahmed, Abdulrahman A Alghamdi, Wejdan S Almalki, Omar A Almutairi
Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is associated with an increase in patient mortality and high rates of renal/non-renal complications. Late detection of the disease has been associated with worse prognosis, but no such study has been conducted from Saudi Arabia. Objectives: To assess the impact of early nephrology referral on the outcomes of patients with AKI. Methods: This retrospective record review included all adult patients (≥18 years) with AKI who were referred to the Nephrology Department at King Abdulaziz University Hospital, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, between May 2019 and July 2020...
September 2022: Saudi Journal of Medicine & Medical Sciences
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35962583/interventions-barriers-and-proposed-solutions-associated-with-the-implementation-of-a-protocol-that-uses-clinical-decision-support-and-a-stress-biomarker-test-to-identify-icu-patients-at-high-risk-for-drug-associated-acute-kidney-injury
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Victoria L Williams, Pamela L Smithburger, Allison N Imhoff, Lara M Groetzinger, Colleen M Culley, Clayton X Burke, Raghavan Murugan, Phillip E Lamberty, Mujtaba Mahmud, Neal J Benedict, John A Kellum, Sandra L Kane-Gill
BACKGROUND: Damage biomarkers are helpful in early identification of patients who are at risk of developing acute kidney injury (AKI). Investigations are ongoing to identify the optimal role of stress/damage biomarkers in clinical practice regarding AKI risk prediction, surveillance, diagnosis, and prognosis. OBJECTIVE: To determine the impact of utilizing a clinical decision support system (CDSS) to guide stress biomarker testing in intensive care unit (ICU) patients at risk for drug-induced acute kidney injury (D-AKI)...
August 12, 2022: Annals of Pharmacotherapy
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35942677/opportunities-in-digital-health-and-electronic-health-records-for-acute-kidney-injury-care
#23
REVIEW
Nicholas M Selby, Neesh Pannu
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The field of digital health is evolving rapidly with applications relevant to the prediction, detection and management of acute kidney injury (AKI). This review will summarize recent publications in these areas. RECENT FINDINGS: Machine learning (ML) approaches have been applied predominantly for AKI prediction, but also to identify patients with AKI at higher risk of adverse outcomes, and to discriminate different subgroups (subphenotypes) of AKI...
December 1, 2022: Current Opinion in Critical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35465620/alerting-to-acute-kidney-injury-challenges-benefits-and-strategies
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josko Ivica, Geetha Sanmugalingham, Rajeevan Selvaratnam
Acute Kidney Injury (AKI) is a complex heterogeneous syndrome that often can go unrecognized and is encountered in multiple clinical settings. One strategy for proactive identification of AKI has been through electronic alerts (e-alerts) to improve clinical outcomes. The two traditional criteria for AKI diagnosis and staging have been urinary output and serum creatinine. The latter has dominated in aiding identification and prediction of AKI by alert models. While creatinine can provide information to estimate glomerular filtration rate, the utility to depict real-time change in rapidly declining kidney function is paradoxical...
May 2022: Practical Laboratory Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35438795/electronic-alerts-and-a-care-bundle-for-acute-kidney-injury-an-australian-cohort-study
#25
MULTICENTER STUDY
Sradha Kotwal, Sanjeeva Herath, Jonathan Erlich, Sally Boardman, Jennifer Qian, Paul Lawton, Craig Campbell, Andrew Whatnall, Su Teo, A Rita Horvath, Zoltán H Endre
BACKGROUND: Early recognition of hospital-acquired acute kidney injury (AKI) may improve patient management and outcomes. METHODS: This multicentre study was conducted at three hospitals (H1-intervention; H2 and H3-controls) served by a single laboratory. The intervention bundle [an interruptive automated alerts (aAlerts) showing AKI stage and baseline creatinine in the eMR, a management guide and junior medical staff education] was implemented only at H1. Outcome variables included length-of-stay (LOS), all-cause in-hospital mortality and management quality...
February 28, 2023: Nephrology, Dialysis, Transplantation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/35372977/the-impact-of-outpatient-laboratory-alerting-mechanisms-in-patients-with-aki
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole V Tolan, Salman Ahmed, Tolumofe Terebo, Zain M Virk, Athena K Petrides, Jaime R Ransohoff, Christiana A Demetriou, Yvelynne P Kelly, Stacy E F Melanson, Mallika L Mendu
Background: AKI is an abrupt decrease in kidney function associated with significant morbidity and mortality. Electronic notifications of AKI have been utilized in patients who are hospitalized, but their efficacy in the outpatient setting is unclear. Methods: We evaluated the effect of two outpatient interventions: an automated comment on increasing creatinine results (intervention I; 6 months; n =159) along with an email to the provider (intervention II; 3 months; n =105), compared with a control (baseline; 6 months; n =176)...
October 28, 2021: Kidney360
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34946388/does-artificial-intelligence-make-clinical-decision-better-a-review-of-artificial-intelligence-and-machine-learning-in-acute-kidney-injury-prediction
#27
REVIEW
Tao Han Lee, Jia-Jin Chen, Chi-Tung Cheng, Chih-Hsiang Chang
Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a common complication of hospitalization that greatly and negatively affects the short-term and long-term outcomes of patients. Current guidelines use serum creatinine level and urine output rate for defining AKI and as the staging criteria of AKI. However, because they are not sensitive or specific markers of AKI, clinicians find it difficult to predict the occurrence of AKI and prescribe timely treatment. Advances in computing technology have led to the recent use of machine learning and artificial intelligence in AKI prediction, recent research reported that by using electronic health records (EHR) the AKI prediction via machine-learning models can reach AUROC over 0...
November 30, 2021: Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34768642/renal-recovery-after-the-implementation-of-an-electronic-alert-and-biomarker-guided-kidney-protection-strategy-following-major-surgery
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laszlo Halmy, Joshua Riedel, Florian Zeman, Birgit Tege, Volker Linder, Carsten Gnewuch, Bernhard M Graf, Hans J Schlitt, Tobias Bergler, Ivan Göcze
Background: The facilitation of early recovery of acute kidney injury (AKI) is an important step to improve outcome, particularly because of the limited therapeutic interventions currently available for AKI. The combination of an electronic alert and biomarker-guided kidney-protection strategy implemented in the routine care may have an impact on the incidence of early complete reversal of AKI after major non-cardiac surgery. Methods: We studied 294 patients in two cohorts before ( n = 151) and after protocol implementation ( n = 143)...
October 31, 2021: Journal of Clinical Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34418198/acute-kidney-injury-identification-for-pharmacoepidemiologic-studies-use-of-laboratory-electronic-acute-kidney-injury-alerts-versus-electronic-health-records-in-hospital-episode-statistics
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Manuela Savino, Lucy Plumb, Anna Casula, Katharine Evans, Esther Wong, Nitin Kolhe, James F Medcalf, Dorothea Nitsch
PURPOSE: A laboratory-based acute kidney injury (AKI) electronic-alert (e-alert) system, with e-alerts sent to the UK Renal Registry (UKRR) and collated in a master patient index (MPI), has recently been implemented in England. The aim of this study was to determine the degree of correspondence between the UKRR-MPI and AKI International Classification Disease-10 (ICD-10) N17 coding in Hospital Episode Statistics (HES) and whether hospital N17 coding correlated with 30-day mortality and emergency re-admission after AKI...
August 21, 2021: Pharmacoepidemiology and Drug Safety
https://read.qxmd.com/read/34348688/effect-of-clinical-decision-support-systems-on-clinical-outcome-for-acute-kidney-injury-a-systematic-review-and-meta-analysis
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Youlu Zhao, Xizi Zheng, Jinwei Wang, Damin Xu, Shuangling Li, Jicheng Lv, Li Yang
BACKGROUND: Clinical decision support systems including both electronic alerts and care bundles have been developed for hospitalized patients with acute kidney injury. METHODS: Electronic databases were searched for randomized, before-after and cohort studies that implemented a clinical decision support system for hospitalized patients with acute kidney injury between 1990 and 2019. The studies must describe their impact on care processes, patient-related outcomes, or hospital length of stay...
August 4, 2021: BMC Nephrology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33972363/electronic-alerts-for-acute-kidney-injury-across-primary-and-secondary-care
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph Barker, Karl Smith-Byrne, Oliver Sayers, Krishan Joseph, Mark Sleeman, Daniel Lasserson, Emma Vaux
PROBLEM: In 2009 the National Confidential Enquiry into Patient Outcome and Death suggested only 50% of patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) receive good standards of care. In response National Health Service (NHS) England mandated the use of electronic AKI alerts within secondary care. However, we recognised AKI is not just a secondary care problem, where primary care has a crucial role to play in prevention, early detection and management as well as post-AKI care. METHODS: AKI alerts were implemented in primary and secondary care services for a population of 480 000...
May 2021: BMJ Open Quality
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33912520/for-whom-the-bell-tolls-acute-kidney-injury-and-electronic-alerts-for-the-pediatric-nephrologist
#32
REVIEW
Elizabeth D Nguyen, Shina Menon
With the advent of the electronic medical record, automated alerts have allowed for improved recognition of patients with acute kidney injury (AKI). Pediatric patients have the opportunity to benefit from such alerts, as those with a diagnosis of AKI are at risk of developing long-term consequences including reduced renal function and hypertension. Despite extensive studies on the implementation of electronic alerts, their overall impact on clinical outcomes have been unclear. Understanding the results of these studies have helped define best practices in developing electronic alerts with the aim of improving their impact on patient care...
2021: Frontiers in Pediatrics
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33847000/electronic-alerts-for-early-detection-of-acute-kidney-injury-considering-their-implementation-in-australian-hospitals
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anna C Bendall, Sven-Jean Tan, Emily J See, Nigel D Toussaint
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
April 12, 2021: Medical Journal of Australia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33646040/the-impact-of-e-alerts-on-inpatient-diagnosis-and-management-of-acute-kidney-injury
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sebastian Spencer, Fay Dickson, Sofia Sofroniadou, Sarah Naudeer, Sunil Bhandari, Adil M Hazara
AIMS/BACKGROUND: Electronic alerts can help with the early detection of acute kidney injury in hospitalised patients. Evidence for their role in improving patient care is limited. The authors have completed an audit loop to evaluate the impact of electronic alerts, and an associated acute kidney injury management pathway, on patient care. METHODS: The audits were conducted at a large tertiary care hospital in the UK. Case notes were reviewed for 99 patients over two periods: pre-alert (in 2013; n =55) and post-alert (in 2018; n =44), using the same methodology...
February 2, 2021: British Journal of Hospital Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33623690/impact-of-electronic-alerts-for-acute-kidney-injury-on-patient-outcomes-interrupted-time-series-analysis-of-population-cohort-data
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Baird, Nicosha De Souza, Rachael Logan, Heather Walker, Bruce Guthrie, Samira Bell
Background: Automated acute kidney injury (AKI) electronic alerts (e-alerts) are rule-based warnings triggered by changes in creatinine and are intended to facilitate earlier detection in AKI. We assessed the impact of the introduction in the Tayside region of UK in April 2015 of automated AKI e-alerts with an accompanying education programme. Methods: Interrupted time-series analysis using segmented regression was performed involving all adults with AKI aged ≥18 years who had a serum creatinine measured between 1 April 2013 and 31 March 2017...
February 2021: Clinical Kidney Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33492454/the-use-of-diagnostic-tools-for-pediatric-aki-applying-the-current-evidence-to-the-bedside
#36
REVIEW
Dana Fuhrman
Given the known deleterious consequences of acute kidney injury (AKI), exciting recent research efforts have focused on developing strategies for the earlier recognition of AKI in the pediatric population. Recognizing the limitations of serum creatinine, investigators have focused on the study of novel biomarkers and practical bedside tools for identifying patients at risk for AKI prior to a rise in serum creatinine. In PubMed, there are presently over 30 original research papers exploring the use of pediatric AKI risk prediction tools in just the last 2 years...
November 2021: Pediatric Nephrology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33461986/electronic-health-record-alerts-for-acute-kidney-injury-multicenter-randomized-clinical-trial
#37
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
F Perry Wilson, Melissa Martin, Yu Yamamoto, Caitlin Partridge, Erica Moreira, Tanima Arora, Aditya Biswas, Harold Feldman, Amit X Garg, Jason H Greenberg, Monique Hinchcliff, Stephen Latham, Fan Li, Haiqun Lin, Sherry G Mansour, Dennis G Moledina, Paul M Palevsky, Chirag R Parikh, Michael Simonov, Jeffrey Testani, Ugochukwu Ugwuowo
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether electronic health record alerts for acute kidney injury would improve patient outcomes of mortality, dialysis, and progression of acute kidney injury. DESIGN: Double blinded, multicenter, parallel, randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Six hospitals (four teaching and two non-teaching) in the Yale New Haven Health System in Connecticut and Rhode Island, US, ranging from small community hospitals to large tertiary care centers...
January 18, 2021: BMJ: British Medical Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33391753/assessing-the-accuracy-of-icd-10-coding-for-measuring-rates-of-and-mortality-from-acute-kidney-injury-and-the-impact-of-electronic-alerts-an-observational-cohort-study
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Rachael Logan, Peter Davey, Nicosha De Souza, David Baird, Bruce Guthrie, Samira Bell
Background: The application of a uniform definition for acute kidney injury (AKI) is vital to advance understanding and management of AKI. International Classification of Diseases (Tenth Revision) (ICD-10) coding is frequently used to define AKI, but its accuracy is unclear. The aim of this study was to determine whether ICD-10 coding is a reliable method of monitoring rates and outcomes of AKI in inpatients compared with biochemically defined AKI, and whether electronic alerts (e-alerts) for AKI affect ICD-10 AKI coding...
December 2020: Clinical Kidney Journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33259046/using-electronic-aki-alerts-to-define-the-epidemiology-of-acute-kidney-injury-in-renal-transplants
#39
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Aled Jones, Jennifer Holmes, Michael Stephens, John Geen, John Williams, Kieron Donovan, Aled O Phillips
BACKGROUND: Little is known regarding the impact of acute kidney injury (AKI) on renal transplant outcome. Our aim was to define the incidence and outcome of AKI in renal transplant patients using data collected from a national AKI electronic alert system METHODS: The study represents a prospective national cohort study collecting data on 1224 renal transplants recipients with a functioning renal transplant, between April 2015 and March 2019. RESULTS: Four hundred forty patients experienced at least one episode of AKI giving an incidence rate of 35...
June 2021: Journal of Nephrology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33148237/development-and-initial-implementation-of-electronic-clinical-decision-supports-for-recognition-and-management-of-hospital-acquired-acute-kidney-injury
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Megan Howarth, Meha Bhatt, Eleanor Benterud, Anna Wolska, Evan Minty, Kyoo-Yoon Choi, Andrea Devrome, Tyrone G Harrison, Barry Baylis, Elijah Dixon, Indraneel Datta, Neesh Pannu, Matthew T James
BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in hospitalized patients and is associated with poor patient outcomes and high costs of care. The implementation of clinical decision support tools within electronic medical record (EMR) could improve AKI care and outcomes. While clinical decision support tools have the potential to enhance recognition and management of AKI, there is limited description in the literature of how these tools were developed and whether they meet end-user expectations...
November 4, 2020: BMC Medical Informatics and Decision Making
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