BMJ Open (Sep 2023)

Intravenous versus oral hydration to reduce the risk of postcontrast acute kidney injury after intravenous contrast-enhanced CT in patients with severe chronic kidney disease (ENRICH): a study protocol for a single-centre, parallel-group, open-labelled non-inferiority randomised controlled trial in Denmark

  • Kristian A Ovrehus,
  • Axel Diederichsen,
  • Mads Thomassen,
  • Selma Hasific,
  • Emil Johannes Ravn,
  • Rikke Hjortebjerg,
  • Kristian Bach Laursen,
  • Claus Bistrup

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-074057
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9

Abstract

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Introduction Contrast-enhanced CT (CECT) is widely used for diagnostic purposes. The use of contrast medium carries a risk for postcontrast acute kidney injury (PC-AKI), especially in patients with AKI or chronic kidney disease (CKD). Current guidelines recommend prophylactic intravenous hydration to prevent PC-AKI in high-risk patients. Oral hydration is non-inferior to intravenous hydration in patients with moderate CKD, but it has not been evaluated in high-risk patients.Methods and analysis The ENRICH trial will enrol 254 patients with estimated glomerular filtration rate ≤30 mL/min/1.73 m2 undergoing intravenous CECT, who are block randomised (2-4-2) with stratification for CKD stage, diabetes status, and indication for referral to prophylactic treatment with oral or intravenous hydration. PC-AKI is defined as an absolute increase in SCr of >0.3 mg/dL or >1.5 from baseline at 2–5 days. Renal function will also be evaluated <90 days, <7 days and 1–3 days before intravenous CECT, and 25–40 days after intravenous CECT. Secondary outcomes include dialysis, renal adverse events, hospitalisation due to hydration-related or contrast-related sequelae, and all-cause mortality ≤30 days postcontrast. Pre- and postcontrast plasma and urinary biomarkers will be evaluated for diagnostic and prognostic accuracy of the primary and secondary outcomes.Ethics and dissemination Oral hydration is patient-friendly and less costly compared with intravenous hydration. If oral hydration is non-inferior to intravenous hydration in high-risk patients, it could be implemented as new hydration strategy, which will facilitate the clinical diagnosing of elective patients with severe CKD without unnecessary resource utilisation. The protocol is approved by the Regional Scientific Ethical Committee for Southern Denmark (S-20210126), and the Data Protection Agency (21/66779). The study is conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. Positive as well as negative findings will be reported in international peer-reviewed journals.Trial registration number NCT05283512.