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Published in: Pediatric Nephrology 10/2017

01-10-2017 | Original Article

Evaluation of height-dependent and height-independent methods of estimating baseline serum creatinine in critically ill children

Authors: Erin Hessey, Rami Ali, Marc Dorais, Geneviève Morissette, Michael Pizzi, Nikki Rink, Philippe Jouvet, Jacques Lacroix, Véronique Phan, Michael Zappitelli

Published in: Pediatric Nephrology | Issue 10/2017

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Abstract

Background

Baseline serum creatinine (bSCr) is required for diagnosing acute kidney injury (AKI). In children, bSCr is commonly defined as the lowest measurement within 3 months of admission. Measured values are often missing and estimating bSCr using height-based glomerular filtration rate (GFR) equations is problematic when height is unavailable.

Methods

This is a retrospective cohort study including 538 children admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) between 2003 and 2005 at two centers in Canada, with measured bSCr, height, and ICU-SCr values. We evaluated the bias, accuracy, and precision of back-calculating bSCr from height-dependent and height-independent GFR equations. Agreement of AKI defined using measured and estimated bSCr was calculated. Multivariate analyses were performed to assess the impact of bSCr estimation methods on the association between AKI and ICU mortality, length of stay, and duration of mechanical ventilation.

Results

Both methods underestimated bSCr by 1–3%, showed good accuracy (∼30% of patients with estimated bSCr within 10% of measured bSCr), but poor precision (wide 95% limits of agreement). The agreement between AKI defined by estimated versus measured bSCr was >80% (κ >0.5). The height-independent method performed best in children >13 years old; however, overall, both methods performed similarly across age subgroups. AKI was associated with longer stay, prolonged mechanical ventilation, and ICU mortality using measured and estimated bSCr.

Conclusions

Height-dependent and height-independent bSCr estimation methods were comparable. This may have significant implications for performing pediatric AKI research using large databases, and in clinical care to define AKI when height is unknown.
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Metadata
Title
Evaluation of height-dependent and height-independent methods of estimating baseline serum creatinine in critically ill children
Authors
Erin Hessey
Rami Ali
Marc Dorais
Geneviève Morissette
Michael Pizzi
Nikki Rink
Philippe Jouvet
Jacques Lacroix
Véronique Phan
Michael Zappitelli
Publication date
01-10-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
Pediatric Nephrology / Issue 10/2017
Print ISSN: 0931-041X
Electronic ISSN: 1432-198X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00467-017-3670-z

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