Objective: To investigate whether a continuous 48-hour infusion of fenoldopam, 0.1 mu g/kg/min, reduced the need for renal replacement therapy in patients with acute renal injury after cardiac surgery. Design: Case-matched study. Setting: Teaching hospital. Participants: Ninety-two patients. Interventions: Patients who developed acute renal injury (defined as serum creatinine doubling or oliguria) after cardiac surgery received a continuous infusion of fenoldopam, 0.1 mu g/kg/min, (46 patients) for 48 hours. They were case matched with 46 patients who developed acute renal injury, had similar baseline characteristics, and received standard treatment (hemodynamic support to obtain a mean arterial pressure > 60 mmHg, fluid administration to increase central venous pressure > 10 mmHg, and loop diuretics to maintain a urine output > 0.5 mL/kg/h). Renal replacement therapy was started when acute renal injury became oligoanuric, when serum creatinine increased > 4 mg/dL or 3 times basal value, or in the presence of severe hyperkalemia (K > 6.5 mmol/L) or severe acidemia (pH < 7). Measurements and Main Results: Patients in the fenoldopam group had a reduced need for renal replacement therapy (8 patients, 17%) with respect to case-matched controls (18 patients, 39%; p = 0.037). The length of intensive care unit stay (median [interquartile range]) was similar in the 2 groups: fenoldopam group, 5 days (3-9 days), and control group, 10 days (3-16 days, p = 0.15). Conclusions: Given the limitations of case-matched studies, fenoldopam may be useful in avoiding renal replacement therapy in patients who develop acute renal injury after cardiac surgery. (c) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Fenoldopam reduces the incidence of renal replacement therapy after cardiac surgery

LANDONI , GIOVANNI;
2008-01-01

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether a continuous 48-hour infusion of fenoldopam, 0.1 mu g/kg/min, reduced the need for renal replacement therapy in patients with acute renal injury after cardiac surgery. Design: Case-matched study. Setting: Teaching hospital. Participants: Ninety-two patients. Interventions: Patients who developed acute renal injury (defined as serum creatinine doubling or oliguria) after cardiac surgery received a continuous infusion of fenoldopam, 0.1 mu g/kg/min, (46 patients) for 48 hours. They were case matched with 46 patients who developed acute renal injury, had similar baseline characteristics, and received standard treatment (hemodynamic support to obtain a mean arterial pressure > 60 mmHg, fluid administration to increase central venous pressure > 10 mmHg, and loop diuretics to maintain a urine output > 0.5 mL/kg/h). Renal replacement therapy was started when acute renal injury became oligoanuric, when serum creatinine increased > 4 mg/dL or 3 times basal value, or in the presence of severe hyperkalemia (K > 6.5 mmol/L) or severe acidemia (pH < 7). Measurements and Main Results: Patients in the fenoldopam group had a reduced need for renal replacement therapy (8 patients, 17%) with respect to case-matched controls (18 patients, 39%; p = 0.037). The length of intensive care unit stay (median [interquartile range]) was similar in the 2 groups: fenoldopam group, 5 days (3-9 days), and control group, 10 days (3-16 days, p = 0.15). Conclusions: Given the limitations of case-matched studies, fenoldopam may be useful in avoiding renal replacement therapy in patients who develop acute renal injury after cardiac surgery. (c) 2008 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/7924
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