Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Are an Important Cause of Acute Kidney Injury in Children

Jason M. Misurac, Chad A. Knoderer, Jeffrey D. Leiser, Corina Nilescu, Amy C. Wilson, Sharon P. Andreoli

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    <p> <h3> Objective </h3></p><p> To characterize nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID)-associated acute kidney injury (AKI) in children. <h3> Study design </h3></p><p> We conducted a retrospective chart review of children diagnosed with AKI through the use of <em> International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision </em> diagnosis code 584.5 or 584.9 from January 1999 to June 2010. Medical records were reviewed to confirm the diagnosis of AKI and to quantify NSAID administration. Pediatric RIFLE criteria were used to codify AKI. Patients were not classified as having NSAID-associated AKI if they had a diagnosis explaining AKI or comorbid clinical conditions predisposing to AKI development. <h3> Results </h3></p><p> Patients (N = 1015) were identified through <em> International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision </em> screening. Twenty-one children had clinical, laboratory, and radiographic studies suggesting NSAID-associated acute tubular necrosis and 6 had findings suggesting NSAID-associated acute interstitial nephritis, representing 2.7% (27 of 1015) of the total cohort with AKI and 6.6% when excluding complex patients with multifactorial AKI. Children with NSAID-associated AKI had a median (range) age of 14.7 years (0.5-17.7 years); 4 patients (15%) were (75%) for whom dosing data were available received NSAIDs within recommended dosing limits. Patients (100% vs 0%, <em> P </em> &lt; .001), intensive care unit admission (75% vs 9%, <em> P </em> = .013), and a longer length of stay (median 10 vs 7 days, <em> P </em> = .037). <h3> Conclusions </h3></p><p> NSAID-associated AKI accounted for 2.7% of AKI in this pediatric population. AKI typically occurred after the administration of correctly dosed NSAIDs. Young children with NSAID-associated AKI may have increased disease severity.</p>
    Original languageAmerican English
    JournalScholarship and Professional Work – COPHS
    Volume126
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 1 2012

    Keywords

    • acute kidney injury
    • nephrotoxicity
    • pediatric

    Disciplines

    • Pediatrics
    • Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences

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