Incidence of Antimicrobial-Associated Acute Kidney Injury in Children: A Structured Review

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Torsten Joerger, Molly Hayes, Connor Stinson, Ibram Mikhail, Kevin J. Downes
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a commonly reported adverse effect of administration of antimicrobials. While AKI can be associated with poorer outcomes, there is little information available to understand rates of AKI in children exposed to various antimicrobials. We performed a structured review using the PubMed and Embase databases. Articles were included if they provided an AKI definition in patients who were < 19 years of age receiving an antimicrobial and reported the frequency of AKI. Author-defined AKI rates were calculated for each study and mean pooled estimates for each antimicrobial were derived from among all study participants. Pooled estimates were also derived for those studies that reported AKI according to pRIFLE (pediatric risk, injury, failure, loss, end stage criteria), AKIN (acute kidney injury network), or KDIGO (kidney disease improving global outcomes) creatinine criteria. A total of 122 studies evaluating 28 antimicrobials met the inclusion criteria. Vancomycin was the most commonly studied drug: 11,514 courses across 44 included studies. Among the 27,285 antimicrobial exposures, the overall AKI rate was 13.2% (range 0–42.1% by drug), but the rate of AKI varied widely across studies (range 0–68.8%). Cidofovir (42.1%) and conventional amphotericin B (37.0%) had the highest pooled rates of author-defined AKI. Eighty-one studies used pRIFLE, AKIN, or KDIGO AKI criteria and the pooled rates of AKI were similar to author-defined AKI rates. In conclusion, antimicrobial-associated AKI is reported to occur frequently in children, but the rates of AKI varies widely across studies and drugs. Most published studies examined hospitalized patients and heterogeneity in study populations and in author definitions of AKI are barriers to a comparison of nephrotoxicity risk among antimicrobials in children.

Abstract Image

儿童抗菌药相关急性肾损伤的发生率:结构化综述
急性肾损伤(AKI)是一种常见的抗微生物药物不良反应。虽然AKI可能与较差的结果相关,但很少有信息可以了解暴露于各种抗菌素的儿童AKI的发生率。我们使用PubMed和Embase数据库进行了结构化审查。如果文章中提供了AKI的定义,并且患者是<19岁,接受抗微生物药物治疗,报告AKI发生率。计算每项研究的作者定义的AKI发生率,并从所有研究参与者中得出每种抗菌剂的平均汇总估计值。根据pRIFLE(儿童风险、损伤、衰竭、损失、终末期标准)、AKIN(急性肾损伤网络)或KDIGO(肾脏疾病改善总体结局)肌酐标准报道AKI的研究也得出了汇总估计。评估28种抗菌素的总共122项研究符合纳入标准。万古霉素是最常被研究的药物:在44项纳入的研究中有11514个疗程。在27285例抗微生物药物暴露中,AKI的总体发生率为13.2%(药物范围为0-42.1%),但AKI的发生率在不同研究中差异很大(范围为0-68.8%)。西多福韦(42.1%)和常规两性霉素B(37.0%)的作者定义AKI合并发生率最高。81项研究使用了prile、AKIN或KDIGO AKI标准,AKI的合并发生率与作者定义的AKI发生率相似。总之,据报道,与抗菌素相关的AKI在儿童中经常发生,但AKI的发生率在不同的研究和药物中差异很大。大多数已发表的研究检查了住院患者和研究人群的异质性以及作者对AKI的定义,这是比较儿童抗菌素肾毒性风险的障碍。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Drugs
Pediatric Drugs PEDIATRICS-PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Pediatric Drugs promotes the optimization and advancement of all aspects of pharmacotherapy for healthcare professionals interested in pediatric drug therapy (including vaccines). The program of review and original research articles provides healthcare decision makers with clinically applicable knowledge on issues relevant to drug therapy in all areas of neonatology and the care of children and adolescents. The Journal includes: -overviews of contentious or emerging issues. -comprehensive narrative reviews of topics relating to the effective and safe management of drug therapy through all stages of pediatric development. -practical reviews covering optimum drug management of specific clinical situations. -systematic reviews that collate empirical evidence to answer a specific research question, using explicit, systematic methods as outlined by the PRISMA statement. -Adis Drug Reviews of the properties and place in therapy of both newer and established drugs in the pediatric population. -original research articles reporting the results of well-designed studies with a strong link to clinical practice, such as clinical pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic studies, clinical trials, meta-analyses, outcomes research, and pharmacoeconomic and pharmacoepidemiological studies. Additional digital features (including animated abstracts, video abstracts, slide decks, audio slides, instructional videos, infographics, podcasts and animations) can be published with articles; these are designed to increase the visibility, readership and educational value of the journal’s content. In addition, articles published in Pediatric Drugs may be accompanied by plain language summaries to assist readers who have some knowledge of, but not in-depth expertise in, the area to understand important medical advances.
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