Follow-up after neonatal heart disease repair: watch out for chronic kidney disease and hypertension!

Louis Huynh(Queen's University), Sara Rodríguez-López(University of Alberta), Kelly Benisty(McGill University), Adrian Dancea(Montreal Children's Hospital), Daniel Garros(University of Alberta), Erin Hessey(University of Alberta), Ari Joffe(University of Alberta), Rachel Joffe(University of Alberta), Andrew S. Mackie(University of Alberta), Ana Palijan(McGill University Health Centre), Alex Paun(McGill University Health Centre), Michael Pizzi(McGill University Health Centre), Michael Zappitelli(Hospital for Sick Children), Catherine Morgan(University of Alberta)
Pediatric Nephrology
June 4, 2020
Cited by 29Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

BACKGROUND: With advances in care, neonates undergoing cardiac repairs are surviving more frequently. Our objectives were to 1) estimate the prevalence of chronic kidney disease (CKD) and hypertension 6 years after neonatal congenital heart surgery and 2) determine if cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (CS-AKI) is associated with these outcomes. METHODS: or albumin/creatinine ≥3 mg/mmol) and hypertension (systolic or diastolic blood pressure ≥ 95th percentile for age, sex, and height) prevalence 6 years after surgery was estimated. The association of CS-AKI (Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes definition) with CKD and hypertension was determined using multiple regression. RESULTS: Fifty-eight children with median follow-up of 6 years were evaluated. CS-AKI occurred in 58%. CKD and hypertension prevalence were 17% and 30%, respectively; an additional 15% were classified as having elevated blood pressure. CS-AKI was not associated with CKD or hypertension. Classification as cyanotic postoperatively was the only independent predictor of CKD. Postoperative days in hospital predicted hypertension at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of CKD and hypertension is high in children having neonatal congenital heart surgery. This is important; early identification of CKD and hypertension can improve outcomes. These children should be systematically followed for the evolution of these negative outcomes. CS-AKI defined by current standards may not be a useful clinical tool to decide who needs follow-up and who does not.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis