Reframing acute kidney injury as a pathophysiological continuum of disrupted renal excretory function

Docherty, N. G., Delles, C. and López-Hernández, F. J. (2024) Reframing acute kidney injury as a pathophysiological continuum of disrupted renal excretory function. Acta Physiologica, (doi: 10.1111/apha.14181) (PMID:38808913) (Early Online Publication)

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Abstract

Surrogate measures of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) continue to serve as pivotal determinants of the incidence, severity, and management of acute kidney injury (AKI), as well as the primary reference point underpinning knowledge of its pathophysiology. However, several clinically important deficits in aspects of renal excretory function during AKI other than GFR decline, including acid–base regulation, electrolyte and water balance, and urinary concentrating capacity, can evade detection when diagnostic criteria are built around purely GFR-based assessments. The use of putative markers of tubular injury to detect “sub-clinical” AKI has been proposed to expand the definition and diagnostic criteria for AKI, but their diagnostic performance is curtailed by ambiguity with respect to their biological meaning and context specificity. Efforts to devise new holistic assessments of overall renal functional compromise in AKI would foster the capacity to better personalize patient care by replacing biomarker threshold-based diagnostic criteria with a shift to assessment of compromise along a pathophysiological continuum. The term AKI refers to a syndrome of sudden renal deterioration, the severity of which is classified by precise diagnostic criteria that have unquestionable utility in patient management as well as blatant limitations. Particularly, the absence of an explicit pathophysiological definition of AKI curtails further scientific development and clinical handling, entrapping the field within its present narrow GFR-based view. A refreshed approach based on a more holistic consideration of renal functional impairment in AKI as the basis for a new diagnostic concept that reaches beyond the boundaries imposed by the current GFR threshold-based classification of AKI, capturing broader aspects of pathogenesis, could enhance AKI prevention strategies and improve AKI patient outcome and prognosis.

Item Type:Articles
Keywords:Acute kidney injury, renal excretory function, glomerular filtration, biomarkers, pathophysiological continuum.
Status:Early Online Publication
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Delles, Professor Christian
Authors: Docherty, N. G., Delles, C., and López-Hernández, F. J.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Health
Journal Name:Acta Physiologica
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:1748-1708
ISSN (Online):1748-1716
Published Online:29 May 2024
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2024 Scandinavian Physiological Society
First Published:First published in Acta Physiologica 2024
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons license

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