International Journal of Molecular Sciences (May 2024)

Elevated Serum KIM-1 in Sepsis Correlates with Kidney Dysfunction and the Severity of Multi-Organ Critical Illness

  • Jonathan Frederik Brozat,
  • Neval Harbalioğlu,
  • Philipp Hohlstein,
  • Samira Abu Jhaisha,
  • Maike Rebecca Pollmanns,
  • Jule Katharina Adams,
  • Theresa Hildegard Wirtz,
  • Karim Hamesch,
  • Eray Yagmur,
  • Ralf Weiskirchen,
  • Frank Tacke,
  • Christian Trautwein,
  • Alexander Koch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms25115819
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 11
p. 5819

Abstract

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The kidney injury molecule (KIM)-1 is shed from proximal tubular cells in acute kidney injury (AKI), relaying tubular epithelial proliferation. Additionally, KIM-1 portends complex immunoregulation and is elevated after exposure to lipopolysaccharides. It thus may represent a biomarker in critical illness, sepsis, and sepsis-associated AKI (SA-AKI). To characterise and compare KIM-1 in these settings, we analysed KIM-1 serum concentrations in 192 critically ill patients admitted to the intensive care unit. Irrespective of kidney dysfunction, KIM-1 serum levels were significantly higher in patients with sepsis compared with other critical illnesses (191.6 vs. 132.2 pg/mL, p = 0.019) and were highest in patients with urogenital sepsis, followed by liver failure. Furthermore, KIM-1 levels were significantly elevated in critically ill patients who developed AKI within 48 h (273.3 vs. 125.8 pg/mL, p = 0.026) or later received renal replacement therapy (RRT) (299.7 vs. 146.3 pg/mL, p 2 mg/dL, p p = 0.018). In univariate and multivariate regression analyses, KIM-1 predicted sepsis, the need for RRT, and multi-organ dysfunction (MOD, SOFA > 12 and APACHE II ≥ 20) on the day of admission, adjusting for relevant comorbidities, bilirubin, and platelet count. Additionally, KIM-1 in multivariate regression was able to predict sepsis in patients without prior (CKD) or present (AKI) kidney injury. Our study suggests that next to its established role as a biomarker in kidney dysfunction, KIM-1 is associated with sepsis, biliary injury, and critical illness severity. It thus may offer aid for risk stratification in these patients.

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