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Reducing acute kidney injury in pediatric oncology patients: An improvement project targeting nephrotoxic medications
Author(s) -
Young Jennifer,
Dahale Devesh,
Demmel Kathleen,
O'Brien Maureen,
Geller James,
Courter Josh,
Haslam David B.,
DanzigerIsakov Lara,
Goldstein Stuart L.
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
pediatric blood and cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.116
H-Index - 105
eISSN - 1545-5017
pISSN - 1545-5009
DOI - 10.1002/pbc.28396
Subject(s) - medicine , nephrotoxicity , acute kidney injury , cefepime , intensive care medicine , febrile neutropenia , emergency medicine , neutropenia , antibiotics , kidney , toxicity , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , antibiotic resistance , imipenem
Background Nephrotoxic medication exposure and associated acute kidney injury (AKI) occur commonly in hospitalized children. At Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, there is an initiative to increase awareness of nephrotoxic medication exposure and decrease rates of associated AKI. The oncology service utilized these data in a quality improvement project to drive reductions in AKI rates. Methods Three interventions were implemented targeted at decreasing the incidence of nephrotoxic exposure, as well as protecting against the conversion of exposures to AKI episodes. Cefepime replaced piperacillin‐tazobactam for febrile neutropenia, vancomycin stewardship limited empiric courses to 72 hours, and nephroprotection for intravenous contrast administration was standardized for defined high‐risk patients. Results The study cohort comprised 42 520 noncritically ill patient days admitted to the oncology service at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. A total of 273 unique patients were exposed to combination nephrotoxic medications, leading to 111 AKI episodes. The rate of nephrotoxic medication exposure within the oncology service decreased by 49% from 16.08 to 8.17 per 1000 patient days. Episodes of AKI associated with nephrotoxic medication exposure decreased by 45% from 3.48 to 1.92 per 1000 patient days. Conclusion Interventions to decrease AKI took a three‐pronged approach. Collectively, this approach was proven successful with significant reductions in both rates of nephrotoxic medication exposure and associated AKI among hospitalized oncology patients.