Publication | Open Access
Temporal Changes in Incidence of Dialysis-Requiring AKI
512
Citations
26
References
2012
Year
Race SubgroupsDialysisPopulation Health SciencesDialysis TherapyRenal FunctionTemporal ChangesClinical EpidemiologyPublic HealthAcute Kidney InjuryChronic Kidney DiseaseGeneral EpidemiologyHemodialysisRepresentative DatasetKidney FailureEnd-stage Renal DiseaseEpidemiologyPopulation EpidemiologyGlobal HealthMedicineNephrology
The population epidemiology of AKI is not well described. The study aimed to identify cases of dialysis‑requiring AKI in the Nationwide Inpatient Sample using validated ICD‑9 codes. The authors analyzed the nationally representative Nationwide Inpatient Sample dataset. Incidence of dialysis‑requiring AKI rose from 222 to 533 per million person‑years (≈10% per year) between 2000 and 2009, with higher rates in older, male, and black patients; demographic shifts and comorbidities explained about one‑third of the increase, and deaths associated with the condition more than doubled from 18,000 to nearly 39,000.
The population epidemiology of AKI is not well described. Here, we analyzed data from the Nationwide Inpatient Sample, a nationally representative dataset, to identify cases of dialysis-requiring AKI using validated International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9) codes. From 2000 to 2009, the incidence of dialysis-requiring AKI increased from 222 to 533 cases per million person-years, averaging a 10% increase per year (incidence rate ratio=1.10, 95% CI=1.10-1.11 per year). Older age, male sex, and black race associated with higher incidence of dialysis-requiring AKI. The rapid increase in incidence was evident in all age, sex, and race subgroups examined. Temporal changes in the population distribution of age, race, and sex as well as trends of sepsis, acute heart failure, and receipt of cardiac catheterization and mechanical ventilation accounted for about one third of the observed increase in dialysis-requiring AKI among hospitalized patients. The total number of deaths associated with dialysis-requiring AKI rose from 18,000 in 2000 to nearly 39,000 in 2009. In conclusion, the incidence of dialysis-requiring AKI increased rapidly in all patient subgroups in the past decade in the United States, and the number of deaths associated with dialysis-requiring AKI more than doubled.
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