Abstract

Daily serum creatinine monitoring protocols for acute kidney injury (AKI) are invasive and may lead to surveillance resistance. We aimed to understand if use of urine neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (uNGAL) could increase high-risk nephrotoxic medication (NTMx) associated AKI screening adherence in neonates. Statistical process control methods prior to and post implementation were trended. The primary outcome, screening adherence, was defined as either daily serum creatinine or uNGAL assessment through 2 days post high-risk NTMx exposure. 1291 monitoring days from the pre-implementation era (4/2020-6/2021) were compared to1377 monitoring days from the post-era (6/2021-10/2022). AKI screening adherence increased (81 to 92%) following implementation of optional uNGAL screening. Urine NGAL accounted for 35% of screening obtained. Use of uNGAL resulted in a 40% reduction in blood sampling for serum creatinine. Incorporation of uNGAL as a complementary screening tool to serum creatinine demonstrated sustained increased AKI surveillance in our Baby NINJA monitoring program.

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