Acute Kidney Injury During Hospitalization Increases the Risk for Venous Thromboembolism.

Acute Kidney Injury During Hospitalization Increases the Risk for Venous Thromboembolism. Chest. 2020 Oct 05;: Authors: McMahon MJ, Collen JF, Chung KK, Stewart IJ, Al-Eid H, Moores LK, Holley AB Abstract BACKGROUND: Kidney disease has been linked to risk for hospitalization related venous thromboembolism (HR-VTE), but the effect size and differences across types of kidney disease are poorly described. RESEARCH QUESTION: We sought to quantify the risk for HR-VTE among patients with acute kidney injury (AKI) and chronic kidney disease (CKD). STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: We prospectively collected data on hospitalized adult patients and documented HR-VTE events. We recorded creatinine clearance (CrCl) daily throughout hospitalization, and modeled the effects that admission CrCl, peak CrCl, average CrCl, and AKI have on HR-VTE. We controlled for known VTE risk factors and daily administration of chemoprophylaxis. RESULTS: Of the 6,552 admissions that met our inclusion criteria, there were 184 (2.81%) patients with a HR-VTE. Surgery, AKI, chemical prophylaxis, and admission albumin were all associated with HR-VTE in univariate analysis, but neither admission CrCl nor average CrCl (throughout the hospitalization) increased the odds of HR-VTE. Kaplan-Meier curves showed AKI, whether it occurred before or during the hospitalization, was significantly associated with time to HR-VTE. Cox-regression analysis found AKI was ...
Source: Chest - Category: Respiratory Medicine Authors: Tags: Chest Source Type: research