Neonatal AKI is Common in Neonatal Intensive Care Units & Leads to Worse Outcomes, Treatment by Dr. Sidharth Kumar Sethi
Background
Neonatal acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in neonatal intensive care units (NICU) and leads to worse outcomes. Stratifying neonates into an “at risk” category allows health care providers to objectively recognize opportunities for improvements in quality of care.
Methods
The “Neonatal AKI Risk Prediction Scoring” was devised as the “STARZ [Sethi, Tibrewal, Agrawal, Raina, waZir]” Score. The STARZ score was derived from our prior multicentre study analysing risk factors for AKI in neonates admitted to the NICU. This tool includes 10 variables with a total score ranging from 0 to 100 and a cut-off score of 31.5. In the present study, the scoring model has been validated in our multicentre cohort of 744 neonates.
Results
In the validation cohort, this scoring model had sensitivity of 82.1%, specificity 91.7%, positive predictive value 81.2%, negative predictive value 92.2% and accuracy 88.8%. Based on the STARZ cut-off score of ≥ 31.5, an area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was observed to be 0.932 (95% CI, 0.910–0.954; p < 0.001) signifying that the discriminative power was high. In the validation cohort, the probability of AKI was less than 20% for scores up to 32, 20–40% for scores between 33 and 36, 40–60% for scores between 37 and 43, 60–80% for scores between 44 and 49, and ≥ 80% for scores ≥ 50.
Conclusions
To promote the survival of susceptible neonates, early detection and prompt interventional measures based on highly evidenced research is vital. The risk of AKI in admitted neonates can be quantitatively determined by the rapid STARZ scoring system.
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