Accelerated Surgery Versus Standard Care in Hip Fracture (HIP ATTACK-1): A Kidney Substudy of a Randomized Clinical Trial

BORGES ; DEVEREAUX ; CUERDEN ; SONTROP ; BHANDARI ; GUERRA-FARFAN ; PATEL ; SIGAMANI ; UMER ; NEARY ; TIBONI ; TANDON ; Ramokgopa ; SANCHETI ; LAWENDY ; BALAGUER-CASTRO ; JENKINSON ; SLECZKA ; NUR ; WOOD ; FEIBEL ; McMAHON ; BICCARD ; ORTALDA ; SZCZEKLIK ; WANG ; TOMAS-HERNANDEZ ; VINCENT ; HARVEY ; PETTIT ; BALASUBRAMANIAN ; SLOBOGEAN ; GARG ; VISTE

Type de document
ARTICLE A COMITE DE LECTURE REPERTORIE DANS BDI (ACL)
Langue
anglais
Auteur
BORGES ; DEVEREAUX ; CUERDEN ; SONTROP ; BHANDARI ; GUERRA-FARFAN ; PATEL ; SIGAMANI ; UMER ; NEARY ; TIBONI ; TANDON ; Ramokgopa ; SANCHETI ; LAWENDY ; BALAGUER-CASTRO ; JENKINSON ; SLECZKA ; NUR ; WOOD ; FEIBEL ; McMAHON ; BICCARD ; ORTALDA ; SZCZEKLIK ; WANG ; TOMAS-HERNANDEZ ; VINCENT ; HARVEY ; PETTIT ; BALASUBRAMANIAN ; SLOBOGEAN ; GARG ; VISTE
Résumé / Abstract
In summary, the risk of perioperative AKI was not significantly different in patients allocated to accelerated surgery versus standard care for hip fracture. AKI occurred nearly twice as often in patients with versus without CKD (21% vs 11%); however, regardless of CKD status, the risk of AKI was not significantly lower with accelerated surgery versus standard care.
Source