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Published in: Critical Care 1/2007

01-02-2007 | Letter

An assessment of the RIFLE criteria for acute renal failure in critically ill HIV-infected patients

Authors: José António Lopes, Joana Fernandes, Sofia Jorge, José Neves, Francisco Antunes, Mateus Martins Prata

Published in: Critical Care | Issue 1/2007

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Excerpt

Acute renal failure is common among hospitalized patients with HIV infection, particularly in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting, and increases mortality. Recently, the Acute Dialysis and Quality Initiative (ADQI) group [1] formulated a new classification for acute renal failure – the Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss, and End-stage kidney disease (RIFLE) classification – that defines three grades of severity – class R (risk), class F (failure), and class I (injury) – and two outcome classes – loss and end-stage kidney disease. Some studies [2, 3] have applied the RIFLE criteria in hospitalized patients, particularly in ICU patients, but the clinical ability of these criteria to predict outcome of ICU HIV-infected patients has not yet been assessed. We sought to evaluate retrospectively the ability of the RIFLE criteria (Table 1) to predict outcome of the HIV-infected patients admitted to the Infectious Diseases ICU of our Hospital (Hospital de Santa Maria, Lisbon, Portugal) between January 2002 and June 2006. Chronic kidney disease patients receiving dialysis were excluded from the analysis. Mortality was assessed at day 60 [1]. We evaluated 97 HIV-infected patients (mean age 42.7 ± 12.2 years; 77 male, 69 Caucasian). According to RIFLE, 46 patients (47.4%; mean age 43.2 ± 11.08 years, P = not significant; 39 male, P = not significant; 28 Caucasian, P = not significant) had some degree of acute renal dysfunction. Of these, 12 patients (26%) were class R, 9 patients (19.5%) were class I, and 25 patients (54.3%) were class F; these patients did not differ in terms of age, gender, race, type of HIV, stage of HIV infection, highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), comorbidity, and severity of illness. In all cases, maximum RIFLE occurred within the first week of hospitalization.
Table 1
Risk, Injury, Failure, Loss, and End-stage kidney disease (RIFLE) classification
Class
GFR criteria
UO criteria
Risk
Serum creatinine × 1.5
<0.5 ml/kg/h × 6 h
Injury
Serum creatinine × 2
<0.5 ml/kg/h × 12 h
Failure
Serum creatinine × 3 or serum creatinine ≥ 4 mg/dl with an acute rise >0.5 mg/dl
<0.3 ml/kg/h × 24 h or anuria × 12 h
Loss
Persistent acute renal failure = complete loss of kidney function >4 weeks
 
End-stage kidney disease
End-stage kidney disease >3 months
 
For conversion of creatinine expressed in conventional units to ST units, multiply by 88.4. Patients are categorized on serum creatinine or urinary output (UO), or both, and the criteria that led to the worst classification are used. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) criteria are calculated as an increase of serum creatinine above the baseline serum creatinine level. When the baseline serum creatinine is unknown and there is no past history of chronic kidney disease, serum creatinine is calculated using the Modification of Diet in Renal Disease formula for assessment of kidney function, assuming a glomerular filtration rate of 75 ml/minute/1.73 m2. Acute kidney injury should be considered when kidney dysfunction is abrupt (within 1 to 7 days) and sustained (more than 24 hours).
Appendix
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Literature
1.
go back to reference Bellomo R, Ronco C, Kellum JA, Mehta RL, Palevsky P, and the ADQI workgroup: Acute renal failure – definition, outcome measures, animal models, fluid therapy and information technology needs: the Second International Consensus Conference of the Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative (ADQI) Group. Crit Care 2004, 8: R204-R212. 10.1186/cc2872PubMedCentralCrossRefPubMed Bellomo R, Ronco C, Kellum JA, Mehta RL, Palevsky P, and the ADQI workgroup: Acute renal failure – definition, outcome measures, animal models, fluid therapy and information technology needs: the Second International Consensus Conference of the Acute Dialysis Quality Initiative (ADQI) Group. Crit Care 2004, 8: R204-R212. 10.1186/cc2872PubMedCentralCrossRefPubMed
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go back to reference Hoste EA, Clermont G, Kersten A, Venkataraman R, Angus DC, De Bacquer D, Kellum JA: RIFLE criteria for acute kidney injury are associated with hospital mortality in critically ill patients: a cohort analysis. Crit Care 2006, 10: R73. 10.1186/cc4915PubMedCentralCrossRefPubMed Hoste EA, Clermont G, Kersten A, Venkataraman R, Angus DC, De Bacquer D, Kellum JA: RIFLE criteria for acute kidney injury are associated with hospital mortality in critically ill patients: a cohort analysis. Crit Care 2006, 10: R73. 10.1186/cc4915PubMedCentralCrossRefPubMed
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go back to reference Uchino S, Bellomo R, Goldsmith D, Bates S, Ronco C: An assessment of the RIFLE criteria for acute renal failure in hospitalized patients. Crit Care Med 2006, 34: 1913-1917. 10.1097/01.CCM.0000224227.70642.4FCrossRefPubMed Uchino S, Bellomo R, Goldsmith D, Bates S, Ronco C: An assessment of the RIFLE criteria for acute renal failure in hospitalized patients. Crit Care Med 2006, 34: 1913-1917. 10.1097/01.CCM.0000224227.70642.4FCrossRefPubMed
Metadata
Title
An assessment of the RIFLE criteria for acute renal failure in critically ill HIV-infected patients
Authors
José António Lopes
Joana Fernandes
Sofia Jorge
José Neves
Francisco Antunes
Mateus Martins Prata
Publication date
01-02-2007
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Critical Care / Issue 1/2007
Electronic ISSN: 1364-8535
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/cc5121

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