Abstract

BackgroundThe patterns, performance characteristics, and yield of diagnostic tests ordered for the evaluation of acute kidney injury (AKI) have not been rigorously evaluated.MethodsWe characterized the frequency of AKI diagnostic testing for urine, blood, radiology, and pathology tests in all adult inpatients who were admitted with or developed AKI (N = 4903 patients with 5731 AKI episodes) during a single calendar year. We assessed the frequency of abnormal test results overall and by AKI stage. We manually reviewed electronic medical records to evaluate the diagnostic yield of selected urine, blood, and radiology tests. Diagnostic yield of urine and blood tests was determined based on whether an abnormal test affected AKI diagnosis or management, whereas diagnostic yield of radiology tests was based on whether an abnormal test resulted in a procedural intervention. In sensitivity analyses we also evaluated appropriateness of testing using prespecified criteria.ResultsFrequency of testing increased with higher AKI stage for nearly all diagnostic tests, whereas frequency of detecting an abnormal result increased for some, but not all, tests. Frequency of detecting an abnormal result was highly variable across tests, ranging from 0 % for anti-glomerular basement membrane testing to 71 % for urine protein testing. Many of the tests evaluated had low diagnostic yield. In particular, selected urine and blood tests were unlikely to impact AKI diagnosis or management, whereas radiology tests had greater clinical utility.ConclusionsIn patients with AKI, many of the diagnostic tests performed, even when positive or abnormal, may have limited clinical utility.

Highlights

  • The patterns, performance characteristics, and yield of diagnostic tests ordered for the evaluation of acute kidney injury (AKI) have not been rigorously evaluated

  • We considered computerized tomography of the abdomen/pelvis (CTAP) tests as an AKI diagnostic test only if the indication for the test mentioned AKI, acute renal failure, elevated serum creatinine (SCr), decreased urine output, or concern for hydronephrosis

  • Diagnostic yield of abnormal tests We evaluated the diagnostic yield of one urine test, four blood tests (SPEP, free light chains, anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA), and cryoglobulins), and two radiology tests

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Summary

Introduction

The patterns, performance characteristics, and yield of diagnostic tests ordered for the evaluation of acute kidney injury (AKI) have not been rigorously evaluated. The traditional approach to the differential diagnosis of AKI emphasizes three broad categories: pre-renal AKI, which results from inadequate perfusion of the kidneys; post-renal AKI, which results from obstruction to the flow of urine; and intrinsic causes of AKI, which can be due to Previous studies have examined the utility of some AKI diagnostic tests in isolation, such renal ultrasonography [10] and urine microscopy [11], but none have comprehensively assessed the patterns and clinical utility of a wide range of diagnostic tests in patients with AKI. We performed this study to identify the frequency with which various urine, blood, radiology, and pathology tests are ordered in patients with AKI, and to assess their diagnostic yield.

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