Metabolomics in Acute Kidney Injury: The Clinical Perspective

Author:

Patschan Daniel12,Patschan Susann12,Matyukhin Igor12,Ritter Oliver12,Dammermann Werner23ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine 1, Cardiology, Angiology, Nephrology, Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, University Hospital Brandenburg, 14770 Brandenburg, Germany

2. Faculty of Health Sciences Brandenburg, Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, 15562 Rüdersdorf bei Berlin, Germany

3. Department of Medicine 2, Gastroenterology, Diabetes, Endocrinology, Brandenburg Medical School Theodor Fontane, University Hospital Brandenburg, 14770 Brandenburg, Germany

Abstract

Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) affects increasing numbers of hospitalized patients worldwide. The diagnosis of AKI is made too late in most individuals since it is still based on dynamic changes in serum creatinine. In recent years, new AKI biomarkers have been identified; however, none of these can reliably replace serum creatinine yet. Metabolomic profiling (metabolomics) allows the concomitant detection and quantification of large numbers of metabolites from biological specimens. The current article aims to summarize clinical studies on metabolomics in AKI diagnosis and risk prediction. Methods: The following databases were searched for references: PubMed, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and Scopus, and the period lasted from 1940 until 2022. The following terms were utilized: ‘AKI’ OR ‘Acute Kidney Injury’ OR ‘Acute Renal Failure’ AND ‘metabolomics’ OR ‘metabolic profiling’ OR ‘omics’ AND ‘risk’ OR ‘death’ OR ‘survival’ OR ‘dialysis’ OR ‘KRT’ OR ‘kidney replacement therapy’ OR ‘RRT’ OR ‘renal replacement therapy’ OR ‘recovery of kidney function’ OR ‘renal recovery’ OR ‘kidney recovery’ OR ‘outcome’. Studies on AKI risk prediction were only selected if metabolomic profiling allowed differentiation between subjects that fulfilled a risk category (death or KRT or recovery of kidney function) and those who did not. Experimental (animal-based) studies were not included. Results: In total, eight studies were identified. Six studies were related to the diagnosis of AKI; two studies were performed on metabolic analysis in AKI risk (death) prediction. Metabolomics studies in AKI already helped to identify new biomarkers for AKI diagnosis. The data on metabolomics for AKI risk prediction (death, KRT, recovery of kidney function), however, are very limited. Conclusions: Both the heterogenous etiology and the high degree of pathogenetic complexity of AKI most likely require integrated approaches such as metabolomics and/or additional types of ‘-omics’ studies to improve clinical outcomes in AKI.

Funder

Brandenburg Medical School publication fund supported by the German Research Foundation and the Ministry of Science, Research and Cultural Affairs of the State of Brandenburg

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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