Community acquired and hospital acquired AKI - two diseases divided by a common definition

Author:

Kumar Vivek1,Jha Vivekanand234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nephrology, Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research, Chandigarh

2. George Institute for Global Health UNSW, New Delhi

3. School of Public Health, Imperial College, London, UK

4. Manipal Academy of Higher Education, Manipal, India

Abstract

Purpose of review Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common across the world. AKI that is acquired in the community (community acquired AKI, CA-AKI) has different risk factors, epidemiological profile, presentation and impact as compared to hospital acquired AKI (HA-AKI). Hence, similar approaches to tackle CA-AKI and HA-AKI might not work. This review highlights the important differences between the two entities that have a bearing on the overall approach to the conditions and how CA-AKI has been overshadowed by HA-AKI in research, diagnosis and treatment recommendations and clinical practice guidelines. Recent findings The overall burden of AKI is disproportionately more in low and low-middle income countries. The Global Snapshot study of International Society of Nephrology's (ISN) AKI 0by25 program has shown that CA-AKI is the dominant form in these settings. Its profile and outcomes vary with geographical and socio-economic characteristics of the regions where it develops. The current clinical practice guidelines for AKI align more with HA-AKI than CA-AKI, and fail to capture the complete spectrum of CA-AKI as well as its impact. The ISN AKI 0by25 studies have uncovered the circumstantial compulsions in defining and assessing AKI in these settings and shown feasibility of community-based interventions. Summary Efforts are needed to better understand CA-AKI in low-resource settings and develop context specific guidance and interventions. A multidisciplinary, collaborative approach with representation from community would be required.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Nephrology,Internal Medicine

Reference32 articles.

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3. Expanding tropics will play greater global role, report predicts: state of the Tropics study aims to call attention to region;Wilkinson;Am Assoc Adv Sci,2014

4. Outcomes of acute kidney injury in children and adults in sub-Saharan Africa: a systematic review;Olowu;Lancet Glob Health,2016

5. International Society of Nephrology's 0by25 initiative for acute kidney injury (zero preventable deaths by 2025): a human rights case for nephrology;Mehta;Lancet,2015

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