TY - JOUR
T1 - Discovery and validation of cell cycle arrest biomarkers in human acute kidney injury
AU - Kashani, Kianoush
AU - Al-Khafaji, Ali
AU - Ardiles, Thomas
AU - Artigas, Antonio
AU - Bagshaw, Sean M.
AU - Bell, Max
AU - Bihorac, Azra
AU - Birkhahn, Robert
AU - Cely, Cynthia M.
AU - Chawla, Lakhmir S.
AU - Davison, Danielle L.
AU - Feldkamp, Thorsten
AU - Forni, Lui G.
AU - Gong, Michelle Ng
AU - Gunnerson, Kyle J.
AU - Haase, Michael
AU - Hackett, James
AU - Honore, Patrick M.
AU - Hoste, Eric A.J.
AU - Joannes-Boyau, Olivier
AU - Joannidis, Michael
AU - Kim, Patrick
AU - Koyner, Jay L.
AU - Laskowitz, Daniel T.
AU - Lissauer, Matthew E.
AU - Marx, Gernot
AU - McCullough, Peter A.
AU - Mullaney, Scott
AU - Ostermann, Marlies
AU - Rimmelé, Thomas
AU - Shapiro, Nathan I.
AU - Shaw, Andrew D.
AU - Shi, Jing
AU - Sprague, Amy M.
AU - Vincent, Jean Louis
AU - Vinsonneau, Christophe
AU - Wagner, Ludwig
AU - Walker, Michael G.
AU - Wilkerson, R. Gentry
AU - Zacharowski, Kai
AU - Kellum, John A.
PY - 2013/2/6
Y1 - 2013/2/6
N2 - Introduction: Acute kidney injury (AKI) can evolve quickly and clinical measures of function often fail to detect AKI at a time when interventions are likely to provide benefit. Identifying early markers of kidney damage has been difficult due to the complex nature of human AKI, in which multiple etiologies exist. The objective of this study was to identify and validate novel biomarkers of AKI. Methods: We performed two multicenter observational studies in critically ill patients at risk for AKI - discovery and validation. The top two markers from discovery were validated in a second study (Sapphire) and compared to a number of previously described biomarkers. In the discovery phase, we enrolled 522 adults in three distinct cohorts including patients with sepsis, shock, major surgery, and trauma and examined over 300 markers. In the Sapphire validation study, we enrolled 744 adult subjects with critical illness and without evidence of AKI at enrollment; the final analysis cohort was a heterogeneous sample of 728 critically ill patients. The primary endpoint was moderate to severe AKI (KDIGO stage 2 to 3) within 12 hours of sample collection. Results: Moderate to severe AKI occurred in 14% of Sapphire subjects. The two top biomarkers from discovery were validated. Urine insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 (IGFBP7) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 (TIMP-2), both inducers of G1 cell cycle arrest, a key mechanism implicated in AKI, together demonstrated an AUC of 0.80 (0.76 and 0.79 alone). Urine [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7] was significantly superior to all previously described markers of AKI (P < 0.002), none of which achieved an AUC > 0.72. Furthermore, [TIMP- 2]·[IGFBP7] significantly improved risk stratification when added to a nine-variable clinical model when analyzed using Cox proportional hazards model, generalized estimating equation, integrated discrimination improvement or net reclassification improvement. Finally, in sensitivity analyses [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7] remained significant and superior to all other markers regardless of changes in reference creatinine method. Conclusions: Two novel markers for AKI have been identified and validated in independent multicenter cohorts. Both markers are superior to existing markers, provide additional information over clinical variables and add mechanistic insight into AKI.
AB - Introduction: Acute kidney injury (AKI) can evolve quickly and clinical measures of function often fail to detect AKI at a time when interventions are likely to provide benefit. Identifying early markers of kidney damage has been difficult due to the complex nature of human AKI, in which multiple etiologies exist. The objective of this study was to identify and validate novel biomarkers of AKI. Methods: We performed two multicenter observational studies in critically ill patients at risk for AKI - discovery and validation. The top two markers from discovery were validated in a second study (Sapphire) and compared to a number of previously described biomarkers. In the discovery phase, we enrolled 522 adults in three distinct cohorts including patients with sepsis, shock, major surgery, and trauma and examined over 300 markers. In the Sapphire validation study, we enrolled 744 adult subjects with critical illness and without evidence of AKI at enrollment; the final analysis cohort was a heterogeneous sample of 728 critically ill patients. The primary endpoint was moderate to severe AKI (KDIGO stage 2 to 3) within 12 hours of sample collection. Results: Moderate to severe AKI occurred in 14% of Sapphire subjects. The two top biomarkers from discovery were validated. Urine insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 (IGFBP7) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 (TIMP-2), both inducers of G1 cell cycle arrest, a key mechanism implicated in AKI, together demonstrated an AUC of 0.80 (0.76 and 0.79 alone). Urine [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7] was significantly superior to all previously described markers of AKI (P < 0.002), none of which achieved an AUC > 0.72. Furthermore, [TIMP- 2]·[IGFBP7] significantly improved risk stratification when added to a nine-variable clinical model when analyzed using Cox proportional hazards model, generalized estimating equation, integrated discrimination improvement or net reclassification improvement. Finally, in sensitivity analyses [TIMP-2]·[IGFBP7] remained significant and superior to all other markers regardless of changes in reference creatinine method. Conclusions: Two novel markers for AKI have been identified and validated in independent multicenter cohorts. Both markers are superior to existing markers, provide additional information over clinical variables and add mechanistic insight into AKI.
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U2 - 10.1186/cc12503
DO - 10.1186/cc12503
M3 - Article
C2 - 23388612
SN - 1364-8535
VL - 17
JO - Critical Care
JF - Critical Care
IS - 1
M1 - R25
ER -