Papers

Peer-reviewed International journal
Feb 10, 2020

Urinary Liver-Type Fatty-Acid-Binding Protein Predicts Long-Term Adverse Outcomes in Medical Cardiac Intensive Care Units.

Journal of clinical medicine
  • Hiroyuki Naruse
  • Junnichi Ishii
  • Hiroshi Takahashi
  • Fumihiko Kitagawa
  • Hideto Nishimura
  • Hideki Kawai
  • Takashi Muramatsu
  • Masahide Harada
  • Akira Yamada
  • Wakaya Fujiwara
  • Mutsuharu Hayashi
  • Sadako Motoyama
  • Masayoshi Sarai
  • Eiichi Watanabe
  • Hideo Izawa
  • Yukio Ozaki
  • Display all

Volume
9
Number
2
First page
pii:E482
Last page
Language
English
Publishing type
Research paper (scientific journal)
DOI
10.3390/jcm9020482

We prospectively investigated the prognostic value of urinary liver-type fatty-acid-binding protein (L-FABP) levels on hospital admission, both independently and in combination with serum creatinine-defined acute kidney injury (AKI), to predict long-term adverse outcomes in 1119 heterogeneous patients (mean age; 68 years) treated at medical (non-surgical) cardiac intensive care units (CICUs). Patients with stage 5 chronic kidney disease were excluded from the study. Of these patients, 47% had acute coronary syndrome and 38% had acute decompensated heart failure. The creatinine-defined AKI was diagnosed according to the "Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes" criteria. The primary endpoint was a composite of all-cause death or progression to end-stage kidney disease, indicating the initiation of maintenance dialysis therapy or kidney transplantation. Creatinine-defined AKI occurred in 207 patients, with 44 patients having stage 2 or 3 disease. During a mean follow-up period of 41 months after enrollment, the primary endpoint occurred in 242 patients. Multivariate Cox regression analyses revealed L-FABP levels as independent predictors of the primary endpoint (p < 0.001). Adding L-FABP to a baseline model with established risk factors further enhanced reclassification and discrimination beyond that of the baseline model alone, for primary-endpoint prediction (both; p < 0.01). On Kaplan-Meier analyses, increased L-FABP (≥4th quintile value of 9.0 ng/mL) on admission or presence of creatinine-defined AKI, correlated with an increased risk of the primary endpoint (p < 0.001). Thus, urinary L-FABP levels on admission are potent and independent predictors of long-term adverse outcomes, and they might improve the long-term risk stratification of patients admitted at medical CICUs, when used in combination with creatinine-defined AKI.

Link information
DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9020482
PubMed
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32050627
PubMed Central
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7073895
ID information
  • DOI : 10.3390/jcm9020482
  • Pubmed ID : 32050627
  • Pubmed Central ID : PMC7073895

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