Abstract

ObjectiveTo develop a clinical model for predicting postoperative acute kidney injury (AKI) in patients of advanced age undergoing cardiac surgery.MethodsA total of 848 patients (aged ≥ 60 years) undergoing cardiac surgery were consecutively enrolled. Among them, 597 were randomly selected for the development set and the remaining 251 for the validation set. AKI was the primary outcome. To develop a model for predicting AKI, visualized as a nomogram, we performed logistic regression with variables selected by Lasso regression analysis. The discrimination, calibration, and clinical usefulness of the new model were assessed and compared with those of Cleveland Clinic score and Simplified Renal Index (SRI) score in the validation set.ResultsThe incidence of AKI was 61.8% in the development set. The new model included seven variables including preoperative serum creatinine, hypertension, preoperative uric acid, New York Heart Association classification ≥ 3, cardiopulmonary bypass time > 120 min, intraoperative red blood cell transfusion, and postoperative prolonged mechanical ventilation. In the validation set, the areas under the receiver operating characteristic curves for assessing discrimination of the new model, Cleveland Clinic score, and SRI score were 0.801, 0.670, and 0.627, respectively. Compared with the other two scores, the new model presented excellent calibration according to the calibration curves. Decision curve analysis presented the new model was more clinically useful than the other two scores.ConclusionsWe developed and validated a new model for predicting AKI after cardiac surgery in patients of advanced age, which may help clinicians assess patients' risk for AKI.

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