Acute kidney injury in patients with cirrhosis: Acute Disease Quality Initiative (ADQI) and International Club of Ascites (ICA) joint multidisciplinary consensus meeting

Mitra K. Nadim(University of Southern California), John A. Kellum(University of Pittsburgh), Lui G. Forni(Royal Surrey County Hospital), Claire Francoz(Hôpital Beaujon), Sumeet K. Asrani(Baylor University Medical Center), Marlies Ostermann(St Thomas' Hospital), Andrew S. Allegretti(Massachusetts General Hospital), Javier A. Neyra(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Jody C. Olson(Mayo Clinic), Salvatore Piano(University of Padua), Lisa B. VanWagner(The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center), Elizabeth C. Verna(Columbia University), Ayse Akcan‐Arikan(Baylor College of Medicine), Paolo Angeli(University of Padua), Justin M. Belcher(Yale University), Scott W. Biggins(University of Pittsburgh), Akash Deep(King's College Hospital), Guadalupe García–Tsao(Yale University), Yuri Genyk(University of Southern California), Pere Ginès(Hospital Clínic de Barcelona), Patrick S. Kamath(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Sandra L. Kane‐Gill(University of Pittsburgh), Manish Kaushik(Singapore General Hospital), Nuttha Lumlertgul(King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital), Etienne Macedo(University of California San Diego), Rakhi Maiwall(Institute of Liver and Biliary Sciences), Sebastián Marciano(Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires), Raimund Pichler(University of Washington), Claudio Ronco(International Renal Research Institute of Vicenza), Puneeta Tandon(University of Alberta), Juan-Carlos Q. Velez(Ochsner Health System), Ravindra L. Mehta(University of California San Diego), François Durand(Université Paris Cité)
Journal of Hepatology
March 26, 2024
Cited by 172Open Access
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Abstract

Patients with cirrhosis are prone to developing acute kidney injury (AKI), a complication associated with a markedly increased in-hospital morbidity and mortality, along with a risk of progression to chronic kidney disease. Whereas patients with cirrhosis are at increased risk of developing any phenotype of AKI, hepatorenal syndrome (HRS), a specific form of AKI (HRS-AKI) in patients with advanced cirrhosis and ascites, carries an especially high mortality risk. Early recognition of HRS-AKI is crucial since administration of splanchnic vasoconstrictors may reverse the AKI and serve as a bridge to liver transplantation, the only curative option. In 2023, a joint meeting of the International Club of Ascites (ICA) and the Acute Disease Quality Initiative (ADQI) was convened to develop new diagnostic criteria for HRS-AKI, to provide graded recommendations for the work-up, management and post-discharge follow-up of patients with cirrhosis and AKI, and to highlight priorities for further research.


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