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NEFROPATIA DA MEZZO DI CONTRASTO Contrast-Induced Nephropathy (CIN) Dino Docci U.O. Nefrologia e Dialisi Ospedale M. Bufalini CESENA Section 4: Contrast-induced Acute Kidney Injury (CI-AKI) Kidney International Supplements (2012) 2, 69-88 BACKGROUND … the Work Group believes that there is a need for a unifying definiton for all forms of AKI and therefore proposes that the term contrast-induced acute kidney injury (CI-AKI) be used for patients developing AKI secondary to intravascular radiocontrast media exposure Evolution of Contrast Media 1950s I 1980s I I 1990s I I I I I COO-Na+ I I I I Ionic Monomer Nonionic Monomer Nonionic Dimer Diatrizoate Iothalamate Iopamidol, Iohexol, Ioversol, Iopromide Iodixanol (Iotrolan) I I I I COO-Na+ I I Ionic Dimer Ioxaglate HOCM LOCM IOCM (High-Osmolar CM) (Low-Osmolar CM) (Iso-Osmolar CM) ~1500-1800 mOsm/kg ~600-800 mOsm/kg ~300 mOsm/kg Types of Contrast Media Viscosity vs. Osmolality of CM Viscosity, cps at 37°C 12 iodixanol 10 iotrolan ioxaglate 8 iohexol ioversol 6 diatrizoate iopamidol iopramide 4 iothalamate 2 0 0 400 800 1200 1600 Osmolality, mOsm/kg H2O 2000 Pathophysiological Impact of Contrast Media Properties Type Iodine content Osmolality Viscosity HOCM + ++++ + LOCM + + ++ IOCM + - +++ CONTRAST MEDIA DIRECT TOXICITY TO PROXIMAL TUBULAR CELL Vasopressin release TUBULAR INJURY Vacuolization (‘osmotic nephrosis’) Necrosis Apoptosis Tubular obstruction … HEMODYNAMIC EFFECTS Osmolality related Osmotic diuresis RHEOLOGIC EFFECTS Endothelial dysfunction Adenosine release Endothelin release Viscosity related Blood viscosity NO and PGs synthesis Tubular luminal dilatation and tubular-interstitial pressure Distal sodium delivery (tubulo-glomerular feedback) O2 consumption due to sodium reabsorption O2 free-radicals generation and release Tubular fluid viscosity VASOCONSTRICTION Reactivity to Angio II Urine flow rate Reduced medullary blood flow Altered renal microcirculation MEDULLARY HYPOXIA Renal CM retention Decreased GFR ACUTE RENAL FAILURE Radiocontrast Exposure ↑Adenosine ↑Endothelin ↑Vasopressin ↑Angiotensin? ↓Nitric Oxide ↓Prostaglandins Intrarenal vasoconstriction Iodine toxicity, osmolality Ionic strength Altered rheology Osmotic load Endothelial dysfunction (DVR) Reduced medullary blood flow ↑O2 consumption Medullary Hypoxia Ischemic injury to tuibular cells CIN Postischemic oxydative stress Cytotoxicity (proximal tubular cells) Radiocontrast Exposure ↑Adenosine ↑Endothelin ↑Vasopressin ↑Angiotensin? ↓Nitric Oxide ↓Prostaglandins Intrarenal vasoconstriction Iodine toxicity, osmolality Ionic strength Altered rheology Osmotic load Endothelial dysfunction (DVR) Reduced medullary blood flow ↑O2 consumption Medullary Hypoxia Ischemic injury to tuibular cells CIN Postischemic oxydative stress Cytotoxicity (proximal tubular cells) CONTRAST-MEDIUM-INDUCED NEPHROPATHY: CONSENSUS REPORT Media Safety Committee of the ESUR) A (Contrast DEFINITION A condition of acute deterioration of renal function that occurs after iv administration of contrast media in the absence of an alternative etiology. Laboratory diagnosis is expressed as an absolute increase (≥0.5 mg/dl) or a relative increase (≥25%) in baseline serum creatinine concentration 48 to 72 hours after exposure to a contrast medium. Morcos SK et al., Eur Radiol 9, 1602-1613 (1999) Hospital Acquired Acute Renal Failure (The Rush University Center experience) Cause Episodes Decreased renal perfusion Medications Radiographic contrast media Postoperative Sepsis Post-liver transplantation Post-heart trasnplantation Obstruction Hepatorenal 147 (44%) 61 (18%) 43 (13%) 35 25 14 8 7 7 Nash K., Hafeez A., Hou S. Am J Kidney Dis 2002, 39: 930-936 Quantifying the problem Overall incidence is ~5% In patients with normal renal function, even in the presence of diabetes, the incidence of CIN is negligible (<1%) The incidence of CIN has been reported as high as 50% for patients with multiple risk factors Rudnick M.R., Goldfarb S., Tumlin J. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol 2008, 3: 261–262 Risk Factors for CIN PATIENTS RELATED CKD (eGFR <60 ml/min) In particular in combination with: DIABETES AGE ≥ 75 PROCEDURE RELATED CHF (NYHA 3-4) and low LVEF CONTRAST ADMINISTRATION ROUTE (IA > IV) Acute myocardial infarction Contrast type (HOCM > LOCM/IOCM) Peripheral vascular disease Large doses of contrast medium Multi-vessel coronary disease Recent contrast administration (<72 h) Bypass graft intervention Hypertension Dehydration/low effective circulatory volume Baseline anemia (Hct <0.39 in male, <0.36 in female) Myeloma? Female gender? Rabdomyolysis Sepsis, cirrhosis Concomitant administration of nephrotoxic drugs Hemodynamic instability (peri-procedural hypotension, shock, post-procedural blood loss, IABP) Need for cardiac surgery after CM exposure Metabolic disorders (hyperglycemia, hyperuricemia, Toprak O (2013) hypercolesteremia, metabolic syndrome, hypoalbuminemia) Chronic Kidney Disease Irrespective of causes, pre-existing Chronic Kidney Disease is the single most important risk factor for CIN. (both necessary and sufficient). and the associated incidence … … increases in proportion with the severity of baseline renal insufficiency. 35 30,6 7586 patients undergoing PCI 30 22,4 CIN, % 25 Data from Minnesota Registry of Interventional Cardiac Procedures 20 15 10 5 2,4 2,5 <1,1 1,2-1,9 0 2,0-2,9 >3,0 Baseline SCr, mg/dl Rinal CS et al., Circulation 2002; 105: 2259 Diabetes Diabetes as RISK MULTIPLIER It is not clear whether diabetes ‘per se’ increases the risk of CIN among patients with normal renal function. The coupling of diabetes with CKD dramatically amplifies the risk of CIN compared with that observed for CKD of the same degree without diabetes. Incidence among diabetic patients has been reported to be 9-40% in diabetic patients with mild-moderate CKD and >50% in those with severe CKD. McCullough PA, JACC 2008; 51: 1419-1428 Advanced Age Some studies indicate that independent risk factor for CIN advanced age is an Mehran et al., JACC 44: 1393-1399 (2004) Marenzi et al., JACC 44: 1780-1785 (2004) … and some claims that this is not. Rihal CS et al., Circulation 105: 2259-2264 (2002) Meschi M et al., Crit Care Med 34: 2060-2068 (2006) POSSIBLE REASONS: age related changes in renal structure and decline in renal function (aging kidney) decline in endothelial function decreased antioxidant reserve reduced renal perfusion (renovascular disease, CHF, dehydration, hemodynamic instability) Route of administration (IA vs IV) CIN incidence is significantly greater in case of intra-arterial administration (from 10-20% for moderate to 25-70% for high-risk patients) compared to intravenous administration (~5%) Katzberg RW and Lamba R, Radiol Clin North Am, 47:789-800 (2009) The higher risk of intra-arterial vs intra-venous administration. Possible reasons: Higher doses of CM and higher concentrations of CM reaching the kidneys More acute and direct exposure of the kidneys to CM Worse baseline ‘risk profile’ Published online: January 30, 2013 Comparison of Risks and Clinical Predictors of Contrast-Induced Nephropathy in Patients Undergoing Emergency versus Nonemergency Percutaneous Coronary Interventions Chong E, Poh KK, Liang S, Soon CY, Tan HC J Interven Cardiol 2010, 23(5): 451-459 STEMI UA/NSTEMI* WITHOUT MI* (primary PCI) (early PCI) (elective PCI) Overall 12.0 9.2 4.5 <0.0005 eGFR >60 8.2 9.2 4.3 <0.0005 eGFR 30-60 19.1 4.5 2.4 <0.0005 eGFR <30 34.4 40.0 25.9 0.510 P *Pre-PCI saline hydration was given if baseline eGFR was <60 ml/min The risk of CIN is significantly higher among STEMI patients. The most likely contributing factors for CIN in this context are: impaired systemic perfusion caused by left ventricular dysfunction, the need for the administration of large volumes of CM, the lack of sufficient time to perform adequate pre-procedural hydration. Accelerated prophylactic regimens can be considered in this cohort. Clinical Evolution of CIN (1) Transient, usually mild, increase in serum creatinine within the first 24-48 hrs post-contrast exposure. Usually non-oliguric. Urinalysis shows minimal or no proteinuria and bland sediment with granular and epithelial casts and free renal tubular epithelial cells. Low fractional excretion of sodium (<1%) Serum creatinine tipically peaks 3-5 days after the contrast administration and returns to baseline or near baseline value within 7-10 days in most cases. Where an acute change is detected, daily serum creatinine measurements should continue until the peak is passed Clinical Evolution of CIN (2) In more severe cases (<15%), usually seen in people with pre-existing CKD and diabetes: acute renal failure can occur in oliguric form oliguria typically persists for 2-5 days, occasionally requiring temporary dialysis serum creatinine levels peak within 5-10 days and return to baseline values within 14-21 days. There is no effective therapy once injury has occurred and management is supportive. PREVENTION is crucial given the short- and long-term prognostic implications associated to CIN The development of CIN is associated with: Prolonged hospitalization and increased related costs Higher rates of in-hospital cardiovascular events Need for temporary dialysis (<1% to 6% according to baseline renal function and patients’ risk profile) Persistence of residual renal dysfunction (~18%), especially noted in patients with pre-existing CKD More rapid progression of underlying CKD to ESRD requiring maintenance dialysis (<1%) … and … higher mortality rate! 35.7% 7.1% 1.1% Serious Adverse Outcomes after Contrast-Enhanced CT Study Tepel et al. (2000) Becker & Reiser (2005) Barrett et al. (2206) Thomsen et al. (2008) Kuhn et al. (2008) Nguyen et al. (2008) Weisbord et al. (2008) TOTAL CIN (%) 12.0 9.0 1.3 3.4 5.2 11.1 3.5 5.4 Dialysis 0/42 0/100 0/153 0/148 0/248 0/117 0/367 0/1175 Death 0/42 0/100 0/153 0/148 0/248 0/117 0/367 0/1175 NOTE – All studies were prospective and included patients with renal insufficiency, with or without diabetes. Overall rate of CIN of 5.4%. Katzberg RW and Newhouse JH, Radiology 2010; 256: 21-28 Observational studies demonstrating a temporal relationship between CIN and mortality could not establish a cause-and-effect relationship. The comorbidities complicate and confound the analysis: CIN may be simply a marker for increased mortality risk rather than a contributing cause of death. RECOMMENDATIONS 2. Before offering iodinated contrast agent to adults for nonemergency imaging, investigate for chronic kidney disease by measuring eGFR. Under 65 years old Over 65 years old Assess Risk of Renal Impairment Measuring eGFR is a mandatory requirement • History of renal disease, proteinuria • Prior kidney surgery • Hypertension • Heart or vascular disease • Gout • Diabetes Mellitus If the answer to any of the questions is YES, then measuring eGFR is a mandatory requirement Serum Creatinine → eGFR (CKD-EPI) Must be obtained within 1 week of the examination for in-patients Within 3 months for out-patients Intravenous Intra-arterial <45 ml/min <60 ml/min No/Very Low risk* ≥45 ml/min ≥60 ml/min At risk *No specyfic prophylaxis or follow-up. Avoid dehydration. Comment The CMSC concludes that the risk of CIN is significantly lower following intravenous CM administration. Evidence suggests that patients referred for contrast enhanced CT are genuinely at risk of CIN if they have an eGFR <45ml/min WITHDRAWAL OF NEPHROTOXIC DRUGS AND METFORMIN CONTRAST MEDIUM USE PHARMACOLOGIC AGENTS HEMODIALYSIS/HEMOFILTRATION HYDRATION Nephrotoxic medications to be witheld before exposure to contrast media NON STEROIDAL ANTI-INFLAMMATORY DRUGS CALCINEURIN INHIBITORS LOOP DIURETICS MANNITOL AMINOGLYCOSIDES AMPHOTERICIN B VANCOMYCIN CHEMIOTHERAPEUTIC AGENTS ACE INHIBITORS & ANGIOTENSIN RECEPTOR BLOKERS … In patients with an eGFR <60 ml/min withdrawal of nephrotoxic medications (at least 24 h before IV CM injection and 48 h before IA administration) is considered best practice because these drugs in combination with CM can have an additive injurious effect. Metformin and intravenous contrast Mark Otto Baerlocher MD, Murray Asch MD, Andy Myers MDCM A DANGEROUS LIASON Metformin is not nephrotoxic per sé, but it is exclusively excreted by the kidney. If contrast medium causes renal failure, metformin excretion is reduced (up to 80%) and accumulation of the drug in the body occurs. In this clinical setting, blood metformin levels may be many times greater than the therapeutic level, potentially increasing the risk of lactic acidosis. 8% of cases of metformin induced lactic acidosis occurs in the setting of contrast induced nephropathy. Lactic acidosis has a mortality rate of up to 50%. CMAJ January 8 2013: 185(1) 1) Patients with eGFR ≥60 ml/min/1.73 m2 can continue to take metformin normally* 2) Patients with eGFR 30-59 ml/min/1.73 m2 receiving intra-arterial CM should stop metformin 48 hrs before CM and should only restart metformin 48 hrs after CM if renal function has not deteriorated 3) Patients with eGFR 30-44 ml/min/1.73 m2 receiving intravenous CM should stop metformin 48 hrs before CM and should only restart metformin 48 hrs after CM if renal function has not deteriorated * Previous version (1999) recommended to stop metformin at the time of injection in patients with normal renal function Contrast Medium Use Type of Contrast Medium Meta-analysis of the relative nephrotoxicity of high- and low-osmolality iodinated contrast media. BJ Barrett and EJ Carlisle Radiology 1993, 188: 171-178 OR* LOCM vs HOCM Overall 0.61 (95% CI 0.48-0.77) Patients with prior renal failure 0.50 (95% CI 0.36-0.68) Patients without prior renal failure 0.75 (95% CI 0.52-1.10) *Odds Ratio of a rise in SCr level of >0.5 mg/dl Data from 25 trials Favors IOCM Favors LOCM NS Data from 36 RCTS. Overall 7,166 pts (3,672 iodixanol; 3,494 LOCM ) Iodixanol-associated reduction suggestive for a lower incidence of CIN, but statistically not significant Incidence of CIN significantly lower with iodixanol when compared with iohexol (OR 0.25, 95% CI 0.11-0.55, P <0.001) but not when compared with LOCM other than iohexol (OR 0.88, 95% CI 0.70-1.10, P=0.25) Analysis of patient subgroups revealed no significant difference in the incidence of CIN with iodixanol vs LOCM among patients receiving intra-arterial CM injections with and without diabetes and/or renal insufficiency undergoing coronary angiography with or without PCI Contrast Medium Use Type of Contrast Medium Volume and Frequency of Administration Searchin’ for the ‘Magical’ volume Maximum Contrast Dose (MCD) ≤100 ml Davidson CJ et al., Ann Intern Med 1989; 110: 119-124 MCD = (5 x body weight [kg] / SCr [mg/dl]) Cigarroa RG et al., Am J Med 1989; 86: 649.652 Freeman RV et al., Am J Cardiol 2002; 90: 1068-1073 CM volume [ml] / CCr [ml/min] ratio <3.7 Laskey WK et al., J Am Coll Cardiol 2007,50: 584-590 g-I iodine [grams] / eGFR [ml/min/1.73 m2] ratio ≤1 Nyman U et al, Acta Radiol 2008; 49: 658-667 CM volume [ml] / MCD ratio <1 Marenzi G et al., Ann Intern Med 2009; 150: 170-177 MCD <4 ml/kg Wijns W et al., Eur Heart J 2010; 31: 2501-2505 CM volume [ml] / eGFR [ml/min/1.73 m2] ratio <2.39 Liu Y et al., Int Urol Nephrol 2012, 44: 221-229 A ‘safe’ volume does not exist. Even doses as low as 20 to 30 ml are capable of inducing CI-AKI in high risk patients. Thus … In all patients only the minimum amount of contrast medium necessary to answer the clinical diagnostic question should be used It is often possible to dilute CM further with normal saline without affecting image quality. Moreover Repeated exposure should be delayed for 48 in patients without risk factors and 72 h in those with diabetes or pre-existing CKD. Ideally, the interval between procedures should be 2 weeks, the expected recovery time of the kidney after acute injury. Pharmacological Prophylaxis Background The mechanisms of pharmacological prophylaxis for CIN include antioxidant strategy, inhibition of renal vasoconstriction, and combination of these two effects. CONTRAST MEDIA DIRECT TOXICITY TO PROXIMAL TUBULAR CELL Vasopressin release HEMODYNAMIC EFFECTS Statins Osmolality related Osmotic diuresis Adenosine release Theophylline TUBULAR INJURY Vacuolization Necrosis Apoptosis Tubular obstruction … Furosemide ET receptor antagonists (tubulo-glomerular feedback) Distal sodium delivery O2 consumption due to sodium reabsorption O2 free-radicals generation and release RHEOLOGIC EFFECTS Furosemide Mannitol Endothelial dysfunction Viscosity related Endothelin release Blood viscosity Tubular fluid viscosity L-Arginine Tubular luminal PGE1 dilatation and tubular-interstitial Statins pressure Nebivolol VASOCONSTRICTION NO and PGs synthesis Reactivity to Angio II Reduced medullary blood flow CCB, ANP Urine Dopamine flow rate Fenoldopam Altered renal microcirculation ACEi MEDULLARY ARB HYPOXIA N-acetylcysteine Allopurinol Ascorbic acid ACUTE RENAL FAILURE Statins, Nebivolol Renal CM retention Decreased GFR 20 10 % HR = 0.97 % 16 8 12,7 12,7 12 6 Est Est 8 4 4 2 0 0 NAC Placebo Primary end point (incidence of CIN) NAC Placebo Combined end point (mortality/need for dialysis at 30 days) 2308 pts, At least 1 risk factor (>70 yrs, CKD, diabetes, CHF, LVEF <0.45, hypotension) NAC (1172 pts) 1200 mg po BID pre and post study vs Placebo (1136 pts) Hydration: NS 1 ml/kg/h 6-12 hrs pre/post-study Oral Statins for CIN Prevention The rationale for Statins use for the prevention of CIN relates to its: antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties capacity of improving endothelial function Weisbord SD and Palevsky PM Curr Opin Nephrol Hypertens 2010, 19: 539-549 Pre-procedural use of statins leads to a significantly reduction (46%) in the pooled risk for CIN (RR 0.54, 95% CI 0.38-0.78, p <0.001) No drugs have been approved by the regulatory authorities for the prevention of CIN and the CMSC did not support pharmacological prophylaxis for preventing CIN because none of the pharmacological manipulations has been shown to offer consistent protection. Renal Replacement Therapies Background Contrast media can be efficiently removed from blood by intermittent hemodialysis, and a single session effectively removes 60 to 90% of contrast media. Yet, reduction of CIN with dialysis is not biologically plausible since the CM would reach the kidneys within one or two cardiac cycles and subsequent removal of CM is unlikely to stop the cascade of renal injury, which would have already begun. KDIGO comment. The effective removal of creatinine during HF or IHD makes it difficult to be certain that the observed lower incidence of CI-AKI is not related to transport removal of creatinine during the procedure. 25 24 RCIN, % Nine randomized trials and 2 nonrandomized trials were included; 8 studies used HD and 2 used HF or HDF. RR=1.02 23,3 23 22 21,2 21 20 RRT SMT CLINICAL SIGNIFICANCE Despite effective CM removal, RCIN occurred at an equal or higher rate in patients undergoing periprocedural RRT than in control patients. 4.5.1 We suggest not using prophylactic intermittent hemodialysis (IHD) or hemofiltration (HF) for contrast media removal in patients at increased risk for CI-AKI. And the Oscar goes to … Hydration and Volume Expansion Background Volume expansion by adequate hydration is the single most important measure that can be taken prior to intravascular CM administration. All patients considered at risk for CIN should be fluid loaded. ADEQUATE VOLUME EXPANSION … Promote diuresis Dilute CM in the tubules thus attenuating its direct toxic effect on the tubular cells DIminishes fluid viscosity in the tubules and vessels with subsequent improved microcirculation Attenuates the vasoconstrictive effect of CM on renal medulla and increases renal production of endogenous vasodilator, thus increasing regional blood flow PERI-PROCEDURAL FLUID ADMINISTRATION PROTOCOLS IV FLUID 1) 0.9% NaCl @ 1.0-1.5 ml/kg/hr for 12 hr pre and for 12 hr post CM administration for same day administration 2) Isotonic NaCl or NaHCO3 @ 3 ml/k/hr for 1-3 hr pre and for 6 hr post CM administration or 3) Isotonic NaHCO3 @ 3 ml/kg/hr for 1 hr pre and @ 1 ml/kg/hr for 6 h post CM administration The aim is to achieve a ‘good’ urine output (>150 ml/h) in the 6 hrs after the radiological procedure. Consensus Guidelines for the Prevention of Contrast Induced Nephropaty Isotonic bicarbonate vs. normal saline 1) SODIUM BICARBONATE: PROS Antioxydant effects Anti-inflammatory properties 2) NORMAL SALINE: CONS Chloride load Review and meta-analysis of 18 prospectively randomized studies. CI-AKI occurred in 11.5% of 3,055 study patients. Use of sodium bicarbonate provided an overall benefit for prevention of CIAKI with bordeline statistical significance (RR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.45-0.95, P = 0.03) Bicarbonate therapy was most effective in coronary procedures, especially when emergent (RR = 0.13, 95% CI = 0.04-0.42, P = 0.0007) Bicarbonate therapy showed a borderline significant trend for benefit in patients with CKD (RR = 0.66, 95% CI = 0.44-1.01, P=0.05) There was no effect on need for RRT or mortality The relative low quality of the individual studies, heterogeneity and possible publication bias means that only a limited recommendation can be made in favour of the use of sodium bicarbonate. Hydration with sodium bicarbonate for the prevention of contrastinduced nephropathy: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials H. Trivedi1, R. Nadella1 and A. Szabo2 1Division of Nephrology and 2Department of Population Health, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA Ten randomized comparisons of isotonic sodium bicarbonate vs normal sodium chloride entered analysis (total = 1,090) OR bicarbonate vs chloride Overall 0.57 (95% CI: 0.38-0.85) Study without additional prophylactic agents 0.33 (95% CI: 0.17-0.62) No evidence of heterogeneity (P=0.10) and no publication bias (P=0.34) CONCLUSIONS The summary effect of randomized trials favors hydration with sodium bicarbonate for the prevention of contrast-induced nephropathy Clinical Nephrology 2010, 74(4): 288-296 Hydration regimens using isotonic sodium bicarbonate or normal saline may be employed and there is probably no difference between the two fluid regimens Canadian Association of Radiologists, 2011 The Committee considers that there is enough evidence to recommend that either volume expansion regimen may be used. The sodium bicarbonate protocol is quicker than the optimal sodium chloride regimen and may be useful for outpatients Updated ESUR Contrast Media Safety Committee Guidelines, 2011 Data on the comparative effectiveness of bicarbonate and saline for the prevention of CIN are insufficient to warrant a recommendation for the routine use of a specific isotonic intravascular fluid. NHS, National Clinical Guideline Center, 2013 Some studies and meta-analyses have shown hydration with sodium bicarbonate to be superior to 0.9% saline in reduction the risk of CIN, but these results have been challenged by other meta-analyses and cannot be considered definitive at this time. ACR Committee on Drugs and Contrast Media (Version 9), 2013 COMMENT The role of oral hydration to prevent CIN continues to evolve. Its potential efficacy seems promising if suplemented with oral sodium chloride. At the present time, the evidence base is not sufficiently robust to recommend oral fluid prophylaxis alone as a surrogate of iv hydration. RenalGuard SystemTM RenalGuard System™ is comprised of a urinary collection bag that is hung on a digital scale that in turn drives a high volume fluid pump. Each drop of urine entering the collection bag results in an equal volume of saline infused back into the patient. The infusion rate is adjusted second by second in response to changes in urine output, thus preventing a net loss or gain of fluid from the body. By administering a small bolus of normal saline initially (~3 ml/kg over 20-30 min) and initiating diuresis with a small dose of furosemide (0.25 mg/kg iv), urine output increases to 500-600 ml/h in about 60 min and can be sustained for 6 h usually without additional diuretic administration. The patient is given the contrast agent when urine output exceeds 300 ml/h. The matching of urine output with intravenous fluid input continues throughout the procedure and for 4 h after the completion of angiography. Given the high urine rate per hour, it is necessary to have a Foley catheter in place. P=0.003 RR=0.16 95% CI 0.04-0.58 OR = 0.47, 95% CI 0.24-0.92 P = 0.025 P=0.005 RR=0.29 95% CI 0.10-0.85 30/146 P=0.44 RR=0.42 95% CI 0.10-1.82 16/146 Overall Elective Urgent angiography angiography Recommendations to PREVENT CI-AKI: Confirm the need for contrast media Identify the high-risk patient (assess baseline eGFR!) Discontinue nephrotoxic drugs before the procedure Hydrate adequately Use the lowest possible volume of low-osmolar or isoosmolar contrast media and avoid repeated injection Check eGFR 24 - 48 and 72 hours after study CONCLUSION Contrast-Induced Nephropathy is likely to remain a significant challenge in the future because the patient population is aging and chronic kidney disease and diabetes are becoming more common. Peter A. McCullough (2008)