Sarah Tabbutt
University of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1990–2024
Research topics
- Intensive care medicine
- Medicine
- Emergency medicine
- Pediatrics
- Internal medicine
- Medical emergency
Selected publications
Critical Care Medicine · 2021 · 112 citations
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Pediatrics
OBJECTIVES: Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury occurs commonly following congenital heart surgery and is associated with adverse outcomes. This study represents the first multicenter study of neonatal cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury. We aimed to describe the epidemiology, including perioperative predictors and associated outcomes of this important complication. DESIGN: This Neonatal and Pediatric Heart and Renal Outcomes Network study is a multicenter, retrospective cohort study of consecutive neonates less than 30 days. Neonatal modification of The Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes criteria was used. Associations between cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury stage and outcomes (mortality, length of stay, and duration of mechanical ventilation) were assessed through multivariable regression. SETTING: Twenty-two hospitals participating in Pediatric Cardiac Critical Care Consortium. PATIENTS: Twenty-two-thousand forty neonates who underwent major cardiac surgery from September 2015 to January 2018. INTERVENTIONS: None. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury occurred in 1,207 patients (53.8%); 983 of 1,657 in cardiopulmonary bypass patients (59.3%) and 224 of 583 in noncardiopulmonary bypass patients (38.4%). Seven-hundred two (31.3%) had maximum stage 1, 302 (13.5%) stage 2, 203 (9.1%) stage 3; prevalence of cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury peaked on postoperative day 1. Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury rates varied greatly (27-86%) across institutions. Preoperative enteral feeding (odds ratio = 0.68; 0.52-0.9) and open sternum (odds ratio = 0.76; 0.61-0.96) were associated with less cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury; cardiopulmonary bypass was associated with increased cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury (odds ratio = 1.53; 1.01-2.32). Duration of cardiopulmonary bypass was not associated with cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury in the cardiopulmonary bypass cohort. Stage 3 cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury was independently associated with hospital mortality (odds ratio = 2.44; 1.3-4.61). No cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury stage was associated with duration of mechanical ventilation or length of stay. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury occurs frequently after neonatal cardiac surgery in both cardiopulmonary bypass and noncardiopulmonary bypass patients. Rates vary significantly across hospitals. Only stage 3 cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury is associated with mortality. Cardiac surgery-associated acute kidney injury was not associated with any other outcomes. Kidney Disease Improving Global Outcomes criteria may not precisely define a clinically meaningful renal injury phenotype in this population.
Circulation · 2020 · 1229 citations
- Medicine
- Intensive care medicine
- Emergency medicine
Frequent coauthors
- 173 shared
J. William Gaynor
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 142 shared
Gil Wernovsky
Children's National
- 138 shared
Susan C. Nicolson
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
- 134 shared
Thomas L. Spray
University of Pennsylvania
- 88 shared
Chitra Ravishankar
University of Pennsylvania
- 79 shared
Bradley S. Marino
Children's Healthcare of Atlanta
- 70 shared
Troy E. Dominguez
University College London
- 65 shared
Nancy S. Ghanayem
University of Chicago
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