Scientific Reports (Jul 2022)

A simple proteinuria-based risk score predicts contrast-associated acute kidney injury after percutaneous coronary intervention

  • Wakaya Fujiwara,
  • Hideki Ishii,
  • Yoshihiro Sobue,
  • Shinya Shimizu,
  • Tomoya Ishiguro,
  • Ryo Yamada,
  • Sayano Ueda,
  • Hideto Nishimura,
  • Yudai Niwa,
  • Akane Miyazaki,
  • Wataru Miyagi,
  • Shuhei Takahara,
  • Hiroyuki Naruse,
  • Junichi Ishii,
  • Ken Kiyono,
  • Eiichi Watanabe,
  • Hideo Izawa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-16690-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Contrast-associated acute kidney injury (CA-AKI) is a complication of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Because proteinuria is a sentinel marker of renal dysfunction, we assessed its role in predicting CA-AKI in patients undergoing PCI. A total of 1,254 patients undergoing PCI were randomly assigned to a derivation (n = 840) and validation (n = 414) dataset. We identified the independent predictors of CA-AKI where CA-AKI was defined by the new criteria issued in 2020, by a multivariate logistic regression in the derivation dataset. We created a risk score from the remaining predictors. The discrimination and calibration of the risk score in the validation dataset were assessed by the area under the receiver-operating characteristic curves (AUC) and Hosmer–Lemeshow test, respectively. A total of 64 (5.1%) patients developed CA-AKI. The 3 variables of the risk score were emergency procedures, serum creatinine, and proteinuria, which were assigned 1 point each based on the correlation coefficient. The risk score demonstrated a good discriminative power (AUC 0.789, 95% CI 0.766–0.912) and significant calibration. It was strongly associated with the onset of CA-AKI (Cochran-Armitage test, p < 0.0001). Our risk score that included proteinuria was simple to obtain and calculate, and may be useful in assessing the CA-AKI risk before PCI.