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Urinary Dickkopf-3 and Contrast-Associated Kidney Damage.
Roscigno, G, Quintavalle, C, Biondi-Zoccai, G, De Micco, F, Frati, G, Affinito, A, Nuzzo, S, Condorelli, G, Briguori, C
Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2021;(21):2667-2676
Abstract
BACKGROUND Administration of iodinated contrast medium (CM) during invasive cardiovascular procedures may be associated with impairment of kidney function. OBJECTIVES Urinary dickkopf-3 (DKK3), a stress-induced renal tubular epithelium-derived glycoprotein, has been identified as a biomarker predicting both acute kidney injury (AKI) and persistent kidney dysfunction. METHODS Urinary DKK3/creatinine ratio (uDKK3/uCr), urine and serum neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL, sNGAL) and serum cystatin C (sCyC) were assessed in 458 patients with chronic kidney disease scheduled for invasive cardiovascular procedures requiring CM administration with universal adoption of nephroprotective interventions. Contrast-associated AKI (CA-AKI) was defined as serum creatinine increase ≥0.3 mg/dl at 48 h after CM administration. Persistent kidney dysfunction was defined as persistent estimated glomerular filtration rate reduction ≥25% at 1 month compared with baseline. RESULTS CA-AKI occurred in 64 or the 458 patients (14%), and baseline uDKK3/uCr ≥491 pg/mg was the best threshold for its prediction. Net reclassification improvement (NRI) was significantly increased by adding baseline uDKK3/uCr to the Mehran, Gurm, and National Cardiovascular Data Registry (NCDR) scores (all p < 0.05), and the same applied to integrated discrimination improvement (IDI) when adding uDKK3/uCr to the Gurm and NCDR scores (p < 0.001). Persistent kidney dysfunction occurred in 57 of the 458 patients (12%) and baseline uDKK3/uCr ≥322 pg/mg appeared as the best threshold for its prediction. Adding baseline uDKK3/uCr to the Mehran, Gurm, and NCDR scores significantly increased IDI and NRI (all p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS Baseline uDKK3/uCr seems to be a reliable marker for improving the identification of patients with chronic kidney disease undergoing invasive coronary and peripheral procedures at risk for AKI and persistent kidney dysfunction.
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Effect of statins on post-contrast acute kidney injury: a multicenter retrospective observational study.
Lin, M, Xu, T, Zhang, W, Li, D, Li, Y, Hong, X, Luan, Y, Zhang, W, Wang, M
Lipids in health and disease. 2021;(1):63
Abstract
BACKGROUND Post-contrast acute kidney injury (PC-AKI) is a severe complication of coronary angiography (CAG) and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Currently, the effect of statins on PC-AKI and its mechanism remains unclear. METHODS This multicenter retrospective observational study included 4386 patients who underwent CAG or PCI from December 2006 to December 2019 in Sir Run Run Shaw Hospital and its medical consortium hospitals. Serum creatinine pre- or post-procedure within 72 h after PCI was recorded. Multivariate logical regression was used to explore whether preoperative use of statins was protective from PC-AKI. The path analysis model was then utilized to look for the mediation factors of statins. RESULTS Four thousand three hundred eighty-six patients were enrolled totally. The median age of the study population was 68 years old, 17.9% with PC-AKI, and 83.3% on preoperative statins therapy. The incidence of PC-AKI was significantly lower in group of patients on statins therapy. Multivariate regression indicated that preoperative statins therapy was significantly associated with lower percentage of elevated creatinine (β: -0.118, P < 0.001) and less PC-AKI (OR: 0.575, P < 0.001). In the preoperative statins therapy group, no statistically significant difference was detected between the atorvastatin and rosuvastatin groups (OR: 1.052, P = 0.558). Pathway model analysis indicated a direct protective effect of preoperative statins therapy on PC-AKI (P < 0.001), but not through its lipid-lowering effect (P = 0.277) nor anti-inflammatory effect (P = 0.596). Furthermore, it was found that "low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C)→C-reactive protein (CRP)" mediated the relationship between preoperative statins therapy and PC-AKI (P = 0.007). However, this only explained less than 1% of the preoperative protective effects of statins on PC-AKI. CONCLUSION Preoperative statins therapy is an independent protective factor of PC-AKI, regardless of its type. This protective effect is not achieved by lipid-lowering effect or anti-inflammatory effect. These findings underscore the potential use of statins in preventing PC-AKI among those at risk.
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Contrast circulation in adult fontan patients using MR Time Resolved Angiography: Application for CT pulmonary angiography.
Duerden, L, Abdullah, H, Lyen, S, Manghat, N, Hamilton, M
Journal of cardiovascular computed tomography. 2020;(4):330-334
Abstract
BACKGROUND When patients with Fontan circulation require a computed tomographic pulmonary angiogram (CTPA), there are significant challenges in achieving adequate contrast opacification due to the altered anatomical connections. This study used Time Resolved Angiography with Interleaved Stochastic Trajectories (TWIST) Magnetic Resonance Angiography (MRA) to examine contrast circulation in a cohort of patients with Fontan circulation who were having routine MRI follow up to inform the contrast timing of any subsequent CT. METHODS This is a single centre, cross-sectional, observational, retrospective study. The time to peak (TTP) signal intensity from the MRA was recorded using regions of interest on the aorta, pulmonary arteries, cavae and Fontan conduit. Patients were grouped by ejection fraction, global longitudinal strain, indexed stroke volume and cardiac index to examine if these cardiac performance parameters affected the mean TTP. Statistical analysis was performed to find the mean TTP for each of the vessels, which was consequently compared between the different cardiac performance parameters. RESULTS 35 patients were included in the study. Mean TTP contrast enhancement was 31s in the thoracic aorta, 46s in the right pulmonary artery, 41s in the left pulmonary artery and 55s in the Fontan conduit. Cardiac performance shows no statistically significant relationship to the peak contrast enhancement whether measured by ejection fraction, global longitudinal strain, stroke volume index or cardiac index. CONCLUSION The mean optimal timing for a single-phase examination of the Fontan circulation, following an upper limb injection, was 55 s following start of contrast injection irrespective of cardiac performance. In TWIST MRA, the IV bolus is 4-5 s duration. A longer bolus is required for CTA, around 20s, suggesting an additional delay will be required. We propose that an optimal single phase CTPA to be protocolled at 70 s following the start of contrast injection, assuming adequate iodinated contrast dose.
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The outcomes of carbon dioxide digital subtraction angiography for percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty of access circuits and venous routes in hemodialysis patients.
Tasaki, Y, Sueyoshi, E, Takamatsu, H, Matsushima, Y, Miyamura, S, Sakamoto, I, Mochizuki, Y, Uetani, M
Medicine. 2020;(36):e21890
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Abstract
The outcomes of carbon dioxide digital subtraction angiography (CO2-DSA) for performing percutaneous transluminal balloon angioplasty (balloon PTA) in hemodialysis patients has not been fully clarified. The purpose was to compare the outcomes of balloon PTA of hemodialysis shunts in terms of vessel patency between patients treated using CO2-DSA and conventional digital subtraction angiography using iodine contrast medium (C-DSA).We retrospectively evaluated 76 patients (38 males and 38 females, mean age: 65.0 ± 14.0 years). They were under hemodialysis and treated with balloon PTA using CO2-DSA or C-DSA at our institution between 2009 and 2016. Mean duration of the follow-up period was 25.59 ± 21.45 months. We compared the patency rates obtained after CO2-DSA-based balloon PTA with those after C-DSA-based balloon PTA. Secondary patency, which was defined as the duration of patency after all further endovascular interventions until surgical repair, was considered as the endpoint in this study.Overall, 19 and 57 patients underwent CO2-DSA- and C-DSA-based balloon PTA, respectively. CO2-DSA- and C-DSA-based balloon PTA produced clinical success rates of 100% and 96.5%, respectively. Blood vessel injury occurred in one patient who underwent C-DSA-based balloon PTA. No major complications occurred in CO2 group. At 24 months, the post-PTA secondary patency rates of CO2-DSA- and C-DSA-based balloon PTA were 94.1% and 93.9%, respectively (P = .9594).CO2-DSA is safe for hemodialysis patients. Compared with C-DSA, CO2-DSA-based balloon PTA produces have a similar secondary patency rate.
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Frequency of thyroid dysfunction in pediatric patients with congenital heart disease exposed to iodinated contrast media - a long-term observational study.
Kubicki, R, Grohmann, J, Kunz, KG, Stiller, B, Schwab, KO, van der Werf-Grohmann, N
Journal of pediatric endocrinology & metabolism : JPEM. 2020;(11):1409-1415
Abstract
Background The thyroid gland of patients with congenital heart disease may be exposed to large doses of iodine from various sources. We assessed the thyroid response after iodine exposure during conventional angiography in cardiac catheterization and angiographic computer tomography in childhood. Methods Retrospective mid- to long-term follow-up of 104 individuals (24% neonates, 51% infants, 25% children) with a median age and body weight of 104 days [0-8 years] and 5.3 kg [1.6-20]. Serum levels of thyroid-stimulating hormone, free triiodthyronine and free thyroxine were evaluated at baseline and after excess iodine. We also assessed risk factors that may affect thyroid dysfunction. Results Baseline thyroidal levels were within normal range in all patients. The mean cumulative iodinate contrast load was 6.6 ± 1.6 mL/kg. In fact, 75% had experienced more than one event involving iodine exposure, whose median frequency was three times per patient [1-12]. During the median three years follow-up period [0.5-10], the incidence of thyroid dysfunction was 15.4% (n=16). Those patients developed acquired hypothyroidism (transient n=14, long-lasting n=2 [both died]) with 10 of them requiring temporary replacement therapy for transient thyroid dysfunction, while four patients recovered spontaneously. 88 individuals (84.6%) remained euthyroid. Repeated cardiac interventions, use of drugs that interfere with the thyroid and treatment in the intensive care unit at the index date were strong predictors for acquired thyroid dysfunction. Conclusions The incidence of acquired hypothyroidism after iodine excess was 15.4%. However, most patients developed only transient hypothyroidism. Systemic iodine exposure seems to be clinically and metabolically well tolerated during long-term follow-up.
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Early Predictors of the Long-term Response to Therapy in Patients With Crohn Disease Derived From a Time-Intensity Curve Analysis After Microbubble Contrast Agent Injection.
Quaia, E, Gennari, AG, Cova, MA
Journal of ultrasound in medicine : official journal of the American Institute of Ultrasound in Medicine. 2019;(4):947-958
Abstract
OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to identify early predictors of the long-term response to therapy in patients with Crohn disease (CD) from time-intensity curves obtained after microbubble injection. METHODS One hundred fifteen consecutive patients with a proven diagnosis of CD involving the terminal ileal loop who were scheduled to begin pharmacologic therapy with biologics (infliximab or adalimumab) were scanned after sulfur hexafluoride-filled microbubble injection before the beginning and at the end of the sixth week of treatment. The absolute value and percentage change of each semiquantitative kinetic parameter (peak enhancement, time to peak enhancement, rise time, mean transit time, wash-in and wash-out rates, area under the curve [AUC] for the whole time-intensity curve, AUC during wash-in, AUC during wash-out, and wash-in perfusion index) as measured on the terminal ileal tract and adjacent reactive mesenteric fat were calculated from time-intensity curves. Patients were followed for at least 24 months with redetermination of the Crohn Disease Activity Index and with at least 1 endoscopy within 18 weeks after the beginning of pharmacologic treatment. The absolute values and percentage changes of kinetic parameters were assessed as potential predictors of the therapeutic outcome by a logistic regression analysis. RESULTS The study group included 66 male and 49 female patients (mean age ± SD, 45.76 ± 11 years). The pretreatment values and percentage changes of the peak enhancement, AUC, AUC during wash-in, and AUC during wash-out were found to be predictors (P < .05) of the long-term therapeutic outcome. CONCLUSIONS The analysis of time-intensity curves obtained after microbubble contrast agent injection provides early predictors of the long-term therapeutic outcome in patients with CD.
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Adverse Drug Reactions to Radiographic Contrast Media in a Teaching Hospital in North India: An Observational Study.
Chopra, D, Jain, A, Garg, R, Dhingra, S
Current drug safety. 2019;(2):122-126
Abstract
BACKGROUND Radiocontrast media are used extensively nowadays to visualize internal organs. Currently, non-ionic iodinated contrast media are used which are generally considered to be safe but some adverse reactions have been reported. Thus, the present study was carried out to analyze the nature and incidence of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) to radiographic contrast media in a teaching hospital. METHODS An observational study carried out for a period of six months in a teaching hospital. Contrast media induced adverse reactions were analyzed in terms of affected organs, rate, causality assessment, severity and preventability. The treatment and outcomes of adverse events were also recorded. Naranjo Probability Scale was used to evaluate the relationship between the contrast agent used and the suspected ADR. The severity of the suspected ADRs was determined using Hartwig Scale and preventability was assessed using modified Schumock and Thornton criterion. RESULTS A total of 15 suspected ADRs occurred in 11 patients with an incidence of 1.4%. It included 5 (45.4%) males and 6 (54.5%) females (p < 05). The highest percentage (72.7 %) of ADRs was seen in adult patients, the mean age being 40.8 years. Vomiting (33.3%) was the most common ADR noted followed by severe nausea and rashes. 64.7 % of ADRs were categorized as probable and 35.3 % were possible. Adverse reactions required treatment in 46.6% patients. There was no fatality reported. CONCLUSION The reactions observed were mild to moderate in severity and occurred within 30 minutes of the administration of the contrast.
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Contrast Induced Acute Kidney Injury and its Impact on Mid-Term Kidney Function, Cardiovascular Events and Mortality.
Ribitsch, W, Horina, JH, Quehenberger, F, Rosenkranz, AR, Schilcher, G
Scientific reports. 2019;(1):16896
Abstract
The existence and clinical relevance of contrast induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI) is still heavily debated and angiographic procedures are often withheld in fear of CI-AKI, especially in CKD-patients. We investigated the incidence of CI-AKI in cardiovascular high risk patients undergoing intra-arterial angiography and its impact on mid-term kidney function, cardiovascular events and mortality. We conducted a prospective observational trial on patients undergoing planned intra-arterial angiographic procedures. All subjects received standardized intravenous hydration prior to contrast application. CI-AKI was defined according to a ≥25% increase of creatinine from baseline to either 24hrs or 48hrs after angiography. Plasma creatinine and eGFR were recorded from the institutional medical record system one and three months after hospital discharge. Patients were followed up for two years to investigate the long term effects of CI-AKI on cardiovascular events and mortality. We studied 706 (317 female) patients with a mean eGFR of 52.0 ± 15 ml·min-1·1.73 m-2. The incidence of CI-AKI was 10.2% (72 patients). In 94 (13.3%) patients serum creatinine decreased ≥25% either 24 or 48 hours after angiography. Patients with CI-AKI had a lower creatinine and a higher eGFR at baseline, but no other independent predictors of CI-AKI could be identified. Kidney function was not different between both groups one and three months after discharge. After a two year follow up the overall incidence of cardiovascular events was 56.5% in the CI-AKI group and 58.8% in the Non CI-AKI group (p = 0.8), the incidence of myocardial infarctions, however, was higher in CI-AKI-patients. Overall survival was also not different between patients with CI-AKI (88.6%) and without CI-AKI (84.7%, p = 0.48). The occurrence of CI-AKI did not have any negative impact on mid-term kidney function, the incidence of cardiovascular events and mortality. Considerable fluctuations of serum creatinine interfere with the presumed diagnosis of CI-AKI. Necessary angiographic procedures should not be withheld in fear of CI-AKI.
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Prophylaxis in High-Risk Patients With eGFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m2: Get the Balance Right.
Nijssen, EC, Nelemans, PJ, Rennenberg, RJ, Theunissen, RA, van Ommen, V, Wildberger, JE
Investigative radiology. 2019;(9):580-588
Abstract
OBJECTIVES Clinical guidelines recommend prophylactic intravenous fluids for patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) less than 30 mL/min/1.73 m to prevent adverse postcontrast outcomes. These patients represent a small minority of the population receiving intravascular iodinated contrast material, and data are not readily available. The current study aim is to gain insight into positive and negative effects of prophylaxis by comparing postcontrast outcomes in high-risk patients who did and did not receive prophylaxis. MATERIALS AND METHODS Observational data were gathered over 4 years. Inclusion criteria were age 18 years or older, eGFR less than 30 mL/min/1.73 m, and elective intravascular iodinated contrast administration. Exclusion criteria were dialysis and nonstandard periprocedural prophylaxis. Primary outcome was postcontrast acute kidney injury (>25% or >44 μmol/L serum creatinine increase within 2-5 days). Secondary outcomes were change in eGFR, 5 mL/min/1.73 m or greater eGFR decline, dialysis, and mortality at 1 month postcontrast including primary cause, as well as complications of prophylaxis. Results were stratified by contrast procedure type and corrected for potential confounders. RESULTS Of all 55,474 elective procedures with intravascular contrast administration, 362 patients met the inclusion criteria: 281 (78%) received standard 0.9% NaCl prophylaxis and 81 (22%) received no prophylaxis. Prophylaxis versus no prophylaxis adjusted odds ratios were nonsignificant and less than 1 for postcontrast renal outcomes (postcontrast acute kidney injury, eGFR decline, dialysis), indicating a trend toward a protective effect of prophylaxis. For mortality, adjusted odds ratios were nonsignificant and greater than 1, indicating a trend toward higher mortality risk after prophylaxis. Of the primary causes of death analyzed in prophylaxis patients, 24% (5/21) were related to prophylaxis. Among 281 prophylaxis patients, 18 (6.4%) complications of prophylaxis occurred: 15 heart failures and 3 arrhythmias. CONCLUSIONS Based on this study, no standard recommendation with regard to giving or withholding prophylaxis can be given. Prophylactic fluids may confer some protection against postcontrast renal adverse events but may also contribute toward increased risk of short-term death. In this setting, benefits and risks of prophylaxis must be carefully weighed and cardiac parameters assessed for each individual patient.
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Biphasic and protracted anaphylaxis to iodinated contrast media.
Kim, TH, Yoon, SH, Lee, SY, Choi, YH, Park, CM, Kang, HR, Cho, SH
European radiology. 2018;(3):1242-1252
Abstract
OBJECTIVES To investigate the prevalence of biphasic and protracted anaphylaxis to iodinated contrast media (ICM), their risk factors and practical observation duration for detecting biphasic reaction. METHODS 145 patients with ICM anaphylaxis from January 2005-February 2016 were retrospectively categorised into uniphasic, biphasic (anaphylaxis recurrence within 72 h after resolution of initial anaphylaxis) and protracted (anaphylaxis >5 h) reaction groups. Multivariate regression analyses of potential risk factors were performed. We calculated negative predictive value (NPV) for biphasic reactions and additional person-hours required to detect one case during post-anaphylaxis observation. RESULTS Fifteen patients had biphasic reactions with secondary reactions with similar or milder severity and six had protracted reactions. Most significant risk factors were anaphylaxis duration >40 min for biphasic reactions (odds ratio (OR), 8.65 [95 % CI, 1.05-70.71]; P=0.044), and additional epinephrine administration within 1 h of initial dosing for protracted reactions (OR, 102.0 [95 % CI, 3.40-3057.25]; P=0.008). A 6-h post-anaphylaxis observation produced NPV of 96.4 %, while requiring a minimum of 65.5 additional person-hours to detect one additional case. CONCLUSION Biphasic and protracted ICM anaphylaxis developed in 10.3 % and 4.1 %, respectively, with revealing risk factors. Six hours could be practical for post-anaphylaxis observation to detect biphasic reaction. KEY POINTS • Incidence of biphasic anaphylaxis in iodinated contrast media anaphylaxis is 10.3 %. • Incidence of protracted anaphylaxis in iodinated contrast media anaphylaxis is 4.1 %. • Initial anaphylaxis >40 min can predict for biphasic anaphylaxis development. • A 6-h post-anaphylactic observation in ICM-related anaphylaxis seems practical.