Publication: Acute kidney injury among salicylate intoxication hospitalisations in the United States
Issued Date
2021-03-01
Resource Type
ISSN
17421241
13685031
13685031
Other identifier(s)
2-s2.0-85094219391
Rights
Mahidol University
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
International Journal of Clinical Practice. Vol.75, No.3 (2021)
Suggested Citation
Charat Thongprayoon, Tananchai Petnak, Wisit Kaewput, Fawad Qureshi, Michael A. Mao, Aleksandra I. Pivovarova, Boonphiphop Boonpheng, Tarun Bathini, Saraschandra Vallabhajosyula, Juan Medaura, Wisit Cheungpasitporn Acute kidney injury among salicylate intoxication hospitalisations in the United States. International Journal of Clinical Practice. Vol.75, No.3 (2021). doi:10.1111/ijcp.13745 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/20.500.14594/78435
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Authors
Journal Issue
Thesis
Title
Acute kidney injury among salicylate intoxication hospitalisations in the United States
Other Contributor(s)
Abstract
Background: This study aimed to evaluate the risk factors and the association of acute kidney injury (AKI) with outcomes, and resource utilisation in patients hospitalised because of salicylate intoxication in the United States. Methods: Hospitalised patients with a primary diagnosis of salicylate intoxication from 2003 to 2014 were identified in the National Inpatient Sample (NIS) database. End-stage kidney disease patients were excluded. The occurrence of AKI was identified using hospital diagnosis code. Clinical characteristics, in-hospital treatment, outcomes and resource utilisation were compared between patients with and without AKI. Results: A total of 13 787 eligible hospital admissions were included in the analysis. AKI occurred in 1279 (9.3%) admissions. Older age, male sex, more recent year of hospitalisation, anaemia, hypertension, congestive heart failure, chronic kidney disease, volume depletion, sepsis and ventricular arrhythmia/cardiac arrest were significantly associated with increased risk of AKI, whereas Hispanic race was associated with decreased risk. AKI was significantly associated with increased risk of organ failure, and in-hospital mortality. In addition, the need for ventilation support, blood component transfusion, renal replacement therapy, length of hospital stay and hospitalisation cost were higher in AKI patients. Conclusion: Approximately one tenth of salicylate intoxication patients developed AKI during hospitalisation. AKI was associated with higher morbidity, mortality and resource utilisations.