Abstract

BackgroundThe development of acute kidney injury (AKI) in hospitalized patients is associated with adverse outcomes and increased health care costs. Simple automated e-alerts indicating its presence do not appear to improve outcomes, perhaps because of a lack of explicitly defined integration with a clinical response.ObjectiveWe sought to test this hypothesis by evaluating the impact of a digitally enabled intervention on clinical outcomes and health care costs associated with AKI in hospitalized patients.MethodsWe developed a care pathway comprising automated AKI detection, mobile clinician notification, in-app triage, and a protocolized specialist clinical response. We evaluated its impact by comparing data from pre- and postimplementation phases (May 2016 to January 2017 and May to September 2017, respectively) at the intervention site and another site not receiving the intervention. Clinical outcomes were analyzed using segmented regression analysis. The primary outcome was recovery of renal function to ≤120% of baseline by hospital discharge. Secondary clinical outcomes were mortality within 30 days of alert, progression of AKI stage, transfer to renal/intensive care units, hospital re-admission within 30 days of discharge, dependence on renal replacement therapy 30 days after discharge, and hospital-wide cardiac arrest rate. Time taken for specialist review of AKI alerts was measured. Impact on health care costs as defined by Patient-Level Information and Costing System data was evaluated using difference-in-differences (DID) analysis.ResultsThe median time to AKI alert review by a specialist was 14.0 min (interquartile range 1.0-60.0 min). There was no impact on the primary outcome (estimated odds ratio [OR] 1.00, 95% CI 0.58-1.71; P=.99). Although the hospital-wide cardiac arrest rate fell significantly at the intervention site (OR 0.55, 95% CI 0.38-0.76; P<.001), DID analysis with the comparator site was not significant (OR 1.13, 95% CI 0.63-1.99; P=.69). There was no impact on other secondary clinical outcomes. Mean health care costs per patient were reduced by £2123 (95% CI −£4024 to −£222; P=.03), not including costs of providing the technology.ConclusionsThe digitally enabled clinical intervention to detect and treat AKI in hospitalized patients reduced health care costs and possibly reduced cardiac arrest rates. Its impact on other clinical outcomes and identification of the active components of the pathway requires clarification through evaluation across multiple sites.

Highlights

  • BackgroundAcute kidney injury (AKI)—a sudden decline in kidney function—can be caused by hypovolemia, infection, nephrotoxicity, primary renal diseases, and urinary tract obstruction [1]

  • Data relating to patients in whom an acute kidney injury (AKI) alert was generated on presentation to the hospital emergency department (ED) are reported elsewhere [18], and such patients were excluded from the analyses reported here

  • We present predictive margins showing adjusted mean costs per spell at the Royal Free Hospital (RFH) and Barnet General Hospital (BGH) before and after the intervention was introduced at the RFH

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Summary

Introduction

BackgroundAcute kidney injury (AKI)—a sudden decline in kidney function—can be caused by hypovolemia, infection (including severe sepsis), nephrotoxicity, primary renal diseases, and urinary tract obstruction [1]. AKI may be a marker of systemic physiological decompensation in acute illnesses (eg, sepsis, trauma, or high-risk surgery), AKI itself might directly cause additional deaths through, for instance, metabolic derangement or extracellular fluid volume overload [6]. Such impacts are expensive; AKI confers excess annual costs of £1 billion to the English National Health Service (NHS) [7]. The development of acute kidney injury (AKI) in hospitalized patients is associated with adverse outcomes and increased health care costs. Simple automated e-alerts indicating its presence do not appear to improve outcomes, perhaps because of a lack of explicitly defined integration with a clinical response

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