Balkan Medical Journal (Nov 2023)

Role of Albumin-corrected Anion Gap and Lactate Clearance in Predicting Mortality in Pediatric Intensive Care Patients

  • Büşra Gündoğan Uzunay,
  • Alper Köker,
  • Nazan Ülgen Tekerek,
  • Levent Dönmez,
  • Oğuz Dursun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4274/balkanmedj.galenos.2023.2023-7-87
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 40, no. 6
pp. 430 – 434

Abstract

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Background:Identifying mortality risk in critically ill children is central to diagnostic and treatment practices. For this purpose, scoring systems, such as the Pediatric Index of Mortality 3 (PIM 3), have been proposed; however, the role of biochemical markers, such as albumin-corrected anion gap (cAG) and lactate clearance (LC), in predicting mortality in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) patients is yet to be explored.Aims:To evaluate the predictive value of the cAG and LC for mortality in pediatric patients admitted to a PICU.Study Design:Retrospective single-center cohort study.Methods:Clinical and laboratory data from the time of PICU admission were collected, and patients were classified into based on their 0- and 6-hour of admission lactate levels into an LC(+) group (patients with normal or decreasing lactate levels) or an LC(−) group (increasing lactate levels). LC and cAG levels were compared using the Mann-Whitney U test and Student’s t-test, respectively. Additionally, multiple logistic regression analysis was performed to evaluate the effect of LC and cAG on mortality.Results:We included 825 patients in the study; the mortality rate was 8.6%. The absence of LC [adjusted odds ratio (AOR) =4.735; 95% confidence interval (CI): 2.163-10.367; (p 18 at the time of PICU admission high lactate levels which do not decrease within 6 hours of hospitalization are associated with an increased risk of mortality. The revised PIM 3 score, which includes cAG and LC, is a better predictor of mortality than the classical PIM 3 score.