Risks associated with renal dysfunction in patients in the coronary care unit
Recommended Citation
McCullough PA, Soman SS, Shah SS, Smith ST, Marks KR, Yee J, Borzak S. Risks associated with renal dysfunction in patients in the coronary care unit. Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2000; 36(3):679-684.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
9-19-2000
Publication Title
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to quantify the impact of baseline renal dysfunction on morbidity and mortality in patients in the coronary care unit (CCU). BACKGROUND: The presence of renal dysfunction is an established independent predictor of survival after acute myocardial infarction and revascularization procedures. METHODS: We analyzed a prospective CCU registry of 12,648 admissions by 9,557 patients over eight years at a single, tertiary center. Admission serum creatinine was available in 9,544 patients. Those not on long-term dialysis were classified into quartiles of corrected creatinine clearance, with cut-points of 46.2, 63.1 and 81.5 ml/min per 72 kg. Dialysis patients (n = 527) were considered as a fifth comparison group. RESULTS: Baseline characteristics, including older age, African-American race, diabetes, hypertension, previous coronary disease and heart failure, were incrementally more common across increasing renal dysfunction strata. There were graded increases in the relative risk for atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, heart block, asystole, development of pulmonary congestion, acute mitral regurgitation and cardiogenic shock across the risk strata. Survival analysis demonstrated an early mortality hazard for those with renal dysfunction, but not on dialysis, for the first 60 months, followed by graded decrements in survival across increasing renal dysfunction strata. CONCLUSIONS: Baseline renal function is a powerful predictor of short- and long-term events in the CCU population. There is an early hazard for in-hospital and postdischarge mortality for those with a corrected creatinine clearance < 46.2 ml/min per kg, but not on dialysis. (C) 2000 by the American College of Cardiology.
PubMed ID
10987584
Volume
36
Issue
3
First Page
679
Last Page
684