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  Vol. 294 No. 7, August 17, 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Acute Renal Failure in Critically Ill Patients

A Multinational, Multicenter Study

Shigehiko Uchino, MD; John A. Kellum, MD; Rinaldo Bellomo, MD; Gordon S. Doig, PhD; Hiroshi Morimatsu, MD; Stanislao Morgera, MD; Miet Schetz, MD; Ian Tan, MD; Catherine Bouman, MD; Ettiene Macedo, MD; Noel Gibney, MD; Ashita Tolwani, MD; Claudio Ronco, MD; for the Beginning and Ending Supportive Therapy for the Kidney (BEST Kidney) Investigators

JAMA. 2005;294:813-818.

ABSTRACT

Context  Although acute renal failure (ARF) is believed to be common in the setting of critical illness and is associated with a high risk of death, little is known about its epidemiology and outcome or how these vary in different regions of the world.

Objectives  To determine the period prevalence of ARF in intensive care unit (ICU) patients in multiple countries; to characterize differences in etiology, illness severity, and clinical practice; and to determine the impact of these differences on patient outcomes.

Design, Setting, and Patients  Prospective observational study of ICU patients who either were treated with renal replacement therapy (RRT) or fulfilled at least 1 of the predefined criteria for ARF from September 2000 to December 2001 at 54 hospitals in 23 countries.

Main Outcome Measures  Occurrence of ARF, factors contributing to etiology, illness severity, treatment, need for renal support after hospital discharge, and hospital mortality.

Results  Of 29 269 critically ill patients admitted during the study period, 1738 (5.7%; 95% confidence interval [CI], 5.5%-6.0%) had ARF during their ICU stay, including 1260 who were treated with RRT. The most common contributing factor to ARF was septic shock (47.5%; 95% CI, 45.2%-49.5%). Approximately 30% of patients had preadmission renal dysfunction. Overall hospital mortality was 60.3% (95% CI, 58.0%-62.6%). Dialysis dependence at hospital discharge was 13.8% (95% CI, 11.2%-16.3%) for survivors. Independent risk factors for hospital mortality included use of vasopressors (odds ratio [OR], 1.95; 95% CI, 1.50-2.55; P<.001), mechanical ventilation (OR, 2.11; 95% CI, 1.58-2.82; P<.001), septic shock (OR, 1.36; 95% CI, 1.03-1.79; P = .03), cardiogenic shock (OR, 1.41; 95% CI, 1.05-1.90; P = .02), and hepatorenal syndrome (OR, 1.87; 95% CI, 1.07-3.28; P = .03).

Conclusion  In this multinational study, the period prevalence of ARF requiring RRT in the ICU was between 5% and 6% and was associated with a high hospital mortality rate.



INTRODUCTION
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The epidemiology and outcome of acute renal failure (ARF) in critically ill patients in different regions of the world are not well understood. Although there have been several epidemiological studies of ARF,1-16 most are either single center1-3,6-8,12 or if multicenter are confined to a single country.4-5,9-11,13, 15-16 The period prevalence and hospital mortality reported in these studies have varied widely (single-center studies: 1%-25%; multicenter studies: 39%-71%) and most studies are not comparable because they used different inclusion criteria. In 1 multinational study14 that collected data for a general severity scoring system and provided further but limited and indirect information about the epidemiology of ARF, more than 90% of participating centers were in Europe or North America. All studies of ARF have been conducted in Australia, Europe, or North America.

We conducted a multinational, multicenter, prospective, epidemiological survey of ARF in intensive care unit (ICU) patients. The objectives of this study were to determine the period prevalence of ARF in ICU patients in multiple countries; to characterize differences in etiology, illness severity, and clinical practice; and to determine the association of these differences with patient outcomes.


METHODS
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This study was conducted at 54 centers in 23 countries from September 2000 to December 2001 (participating centers are listed at the end of the article). The study protocol was reviewed by the ethics committees or investigational review boards at each participating site. Because of the anonymous and noninterventional fashion of this study, the ethical committees of most study centers waived the need for informed consent. At centers in which the ethics committees or investigational review boards required informed consent, formal written consent was obtained from patients or surrogates.

Study Population

All patients who were older than 12 years (several ICUs treated adolescents) and who were admitted to 1 of the participating ICUs during the observational period were considered for study inclusion. From this population, only patients who were treated with renal replacement therapy (RRT) other than for drug poisoning or who had at least 1 of the predefined criteria for ARF were included in the study.

The criteria for ARF were oliguria defined as urine output of less than 200 mL in 12 hours and/or marked azotemia defined as a blood urea nitrogen level higher than 84 mg/dL (>30 mmol/L). These criteria were chosen because they are simple, objective, numerically identifiable, and likely to be considered triggers for the initiation of RRT in the ICU. While other definitions for ARF exist and recent consensus criteria for acute renal dysfunction include less severe forms,17-18 our intent was to study severe ARF that likely would be treated with RRT. Patients with any dialysis treatment before admission to the ICU or patients with end-stage renal failure and receiving dialysis were excluded.

Data Collection

The following information was prospectively obtained at study inclusion and was recorded on a standardized case report form developed for this study: sex, date of birth, body weight (measured or estimated at ICU admission), date of hospital admission, premorbid renal function (any evidence of abnormal serum level of creatinine or creatinine clearance prior to hospital admission), premorbid creatinine level, date of ICU admission, the Simplified Acute Physiology Score19 (SAPS II) on the day of ICU admission, creatinine and blood urea nitrogen levels at ICU admission, and primary diagnosis.

The contributing factors to ARF were identified from a list of 7 possible choices (septic shock, cardiogenic shock, hypovolemia, drug-induced, obstructive uropathy, major surgery, and other) according to the judgment of the treating clinician. More than 1 contributing factor could be selected in each case. When a patient was treated with RRT, the initial mode of RRT was recorded. Renal replacement therapy was defined as either peritoneal dialysis or any technique of renal support requiring an extracorporeal circuit and an artificial membrane. Need for mechanical ventilation and inotropes/vasopressors at inclusion into the study, date of ICU discharge, date of hospital discharge, survival at ICU and hospital discharge, and need for RRT at hospital discharge were obtained.

Data were collected by means of an electronically prepared Excel-based data collection tool (Microsoft Corp, Seattle, Wash), which was made available to participating centers with instructions. All centers were asked to complete data entry and e-mail the data to the central office, where the data were screened in detail by a dedicated intensive care specialist for any missing information, logical errors, insufficient detail, or addition of queries. Any queries generated an immediate e-mail inquiry and were to be resolved within 48 hours.

Statistical Analyses

Data are presented as median and interquartile range (IQR; 25th to 75th percentiles) or percentages (95% confidence intervals [CIs]). Multivariable logistic regression analysis was conducted to investigate risk factors for hospital mortality (proc LOGIST version 6.12, SAS Institute Inc, Cary, NC). The following variables were investigated as independent risk factors using a backward elimination approach: type and size of hospital, type and size of ICU, age, sex, body weight, premorbid renal function, hospital stay prior to ARF, SAPS II score, serum creatinine and urea nitrogen levels at ICU admission, use of mechanical ventilation, use of vasopressors or inotropes, reason for ICU admission, and factors contributing to ARF. Variables were allowed to remain in the models if the multivariable analysis yielded a P<.05. Mode of RRT was not used as a variable because patients not receiving RRT were included. The contribution of dummy variables, such as ICU admission diagnosis and study center, to the model was assessed using a likelihood ratio {chi}2. All other variables were assessed based on the Wald {chi}2; P<.05 was considered statistically significant.


RESULTS
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Epidemiology of ARF

From September 2000 to December 2001, 29 269 critically ill patients were admitted to the ICUs at 54 study centers (Table 1) in 23 countries (2 centers did not provide the number of ICU admissions). The median screening period at each study center was 183 days (IQR, 131-215 days). Among these patients, 1738 patients (5.7%; 95% CI, 5.5%-6.0%) had ARF sometime during their ICU stay as defined by the study criteria (57 patients from the 2 centers that did not provide the number of ICU admissions were excluded from this calculation). The period prevalence ranged from 1.4% to 25.9% across all study centers. Of the patients with ARF documented by study criteria, 1260 patients (4.2%; 95% CI, 4.0%-4.4%) were treated with RRT and 478 (1.6%; 95% CI, 1.4%-1.7%) had ARF but were not treated with RRT.


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Table 1. Characteristics of Patients With Acute Renal Failure and Participating Centers


Patient demographics are shown in Table 1. The median age of patients with ARF was 67 years (IQR, 53-75 years). The median SAPS II score was 48 (IQR, 38-61). The median body weight was 74 kg (IQR, 63-85 kg). Approximately 30% of patients had chronic renal dysfunction but were not receiving dialysis treatment. Estimated creatinine clearance at ICU admission was 35 mL/min (IQR, 20-59 mL/min) (0.58 mL/s; IQR, 0.33-0.99 mL/s). Among the patients who were treated with RRT, continuous RRT was the most common initial modality used (80.0%), followed by intermittent RRT (16.9%), and peritoneal dialysis and slow continuous ultrafiltration (3.2%).

The major reason for ICU admission was medical in 58.9% of patients and surgical in the remaining 41.1%. Cardiovascular surgery was the most common diagnostic grouping, followed by medical respiratory, medical cardiovascular, gastrointestinal tract surgery, medical gastrointestinal tract, and sepsis. In 47.5% of patients, ARF was associated with septic shock. Thirty-four percent of ARF was associated with major surgery, 27% was related to cardiogenic shock, 26% was related to hypovolemia, and 19% of ARF was potentially drug-related. Medical and surgical ICU admissions by diagnostic groups and the distribution of other possible contributing factors to ARF appear in Table 2.


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Table 2. Medical and Surgical Intensive Care Unit Admissions and Contributing Factors to Acute Renal Failure


Outcomes

Fifty-two percent of all ARF patients died in the ICU and another 8% died in the hospital after discharge from the ICU, resulting in the overall hospital mortality of 60.3% (95% CI, 58.0%-62.6%); whereas SAPS II predicted mortality was 45.6% (P<.001) (Table 3). Of patients who survived to hospital discharge, 13.8% (95% CI, 11.2%-16.3%) required RRT at the time of discharge. The median length of ICU stay was 10 days (IQR, 5-22 days) and the median length of hospital stay was 22 days (IQR, 11-44 days). The period prevalence and mortality (observed and predicted) by country appear in Table 3. However, these data are shown for illustrative purposes and comparisons across countries are not possible because sampling was not representative in any country.


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Table 3. Period Prevalence of Acute Renal Failure and Mortality by Country*


The following variables were entered in the backward elimination model building process of multivariate regression analysis and were not found to be significant independent predictors of outcome, so did not contribute to the final model: sex, premorbid renal impairment, estimated creatinine clearance, some of the contributing factors to ARF (major surgery, hypovolemia, drug-induced, and obstructive uropathy), type of hospital (academic or nonacademic), and number of hospital beds. In the final model, important risk factors for outcome included vasopressors, mechanical ventilation, sepsis/septic shock, cardiogenic shock, hepatorenal syndrome diagnostic grouping, type of ICU, and number of beds in each ICU. The complete results of multivariate regression analysis appear in Table 4. As a separate analysis, we repeated the multivariate regression using ICU mortality as the dependent variable and the results were essentially the same (data not shown).


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Table 4. Multivariable Logistic Regression Analysis for Hospital Mortality in Critically Ill Patients With Acute Renal Failure*



COMMENT
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This study is, to our knowledge, the first large international investigation of the epidemiology and outcome of ARF in critically ill patients. We screened nearly 30 000 patients and found that the period prevalence of ARF associated with critical illness using our simple inclusion criteria was 5.7%. This is the largest and most globally representative study of the period prevalence of ARF in the ICU. The period prevalence of ARF had been reported from 1.5% to 24%, depending on populations studied and criteria used.2, 5-6,13-14 In our study, period prevalence of ARF varied among study centers to a nearly identical extent (1.4%-25.9%) despite our use of a single set of criteria. We recognize that even though we studied only 54 centers and 23 countries, we speculate that the worldwide period prevalence of ARF (according to our definition) in critically ill patients is approximately 6%. Based on our research, the worldwide period prevalence of acute RRT in the ICU is approximately 4% (or two thirds of those with ARF).

Septic shock was the most common contributing factor to ARF. The frequency in which it was a contributing factor to the development of ARF was around 50% in all centers. Logistic regression showed that study center, older age, time between hospital and study inclusion, SAPS II score, use of mechanical ventilation, and vasopressors were all independent significant risk factors for mortality. These findings are consistent with previous findings.2-5,13, 16 The effects of time between hospital admission and study inclusion (development of ARF) suggests that the delayed development of ARF while in the hospital selects a particular group of patients with a poor prognosis.

We found that observed mortality was significantly higher than SAPS II predicted mortality (60.3% vs 45.6%; P<.001). The developmental cohort for the SAPS II score excluded burn, coronary care, and cardiac surgery patients.19 In our study, there were approximately 300 cardiac surgery patients and 10 burn patients. Six study centers included some patients from their coronary care units, although such patients contributed to a small population. Therefore, we recalculated observed and predicted mortality after excluding cardiac surgery patients and found that the difference in observed vs predicted mortality still remained significant (61.3% vs 46.1%; P<.001). Several epidemiological studies of SAPS II11-13,15 for ARF have previously reported various relationships between observed and predicted mortality (from overestimation to underestimation). Considering that our study is multinational and thus fairly representative of a variety of populations, it is likely that SAPS II generally underestimates mortality in ARF patients.

We found that most survivors of ARF (86%) were dialysis-independent at hospital discharge. Although these results are consistent with recent clinical trials of ARF,20-22 they are better than estimates from large epidemiological studies in the United States in which roughly 65% of surviving patients are thought to be free of dialysis at hospital discharge.3, 23 These findings could significantly impact the way in which interventional trials are designed in the future.

Our study has several limitations. First, centers chose to participate in this study and are most likely not representative of any single country. Therefore, it is likely that there was a self-selection bias toward centers with a particular interest in ARF and its management. These centers might have managed more ARF patients, treated them more aggressively, used continuous RRT more frequently, and produced different outcomes compared with other institutions. However, the period prevalence of ARF, the demographic features of the patients, and overall mortality were similar to previous studies.

Second, this is an observational study not a randomized controlled trial. However, the sample size is the largest in the literature and the data were collected in 23 countries around the world. As such, this study provides the first available estimates of global treatment and outcomes for ARF. We did not include some potentially important variables in the multivariate analysis, such as mode and intensity of RRT, timing of the beginning of treatment, and hospital admission diagnosis. We did not include mode or intensity of RRT as variables in the logistic regression analysis because approximately one third of patients were not treated with RRT. Mode and intensity of RRT might affect outcome of ARF patients but available data are inconsistent.20-22,24-26

Third, we only considered baseline clinical variables and data obtained at study inclusion in our analysis. This component of the study focuses on the epidemiological aspects of ARF, and this choice likely affected our findings. Had we collected information at hospital or ICU admission, we might have found that other variables influenced final outcome. However, the focus of our investigation related to the onset of ARF in the ICU and the understanding of what factors detectable at that time might have influenced subsequent outcome.

Fourth, our definition of ARF was probably skewed toward a high level of severity. On the other hand, no accepted or validated definitions of ARF exist. We did not provide clinicians with a standardized definition of chronic renal failure. No consensus definition exists in this setting and the diagnosis is complex and involves data obtained from history, biochemical analysis, body size, sex, hematological information, and imaging. We consider it unlikely that this would have influenced our major findings because the period prevalence was essentially the same as that found in previous studies.2, 5-6,13-14 Unlike some of these studies, we did not find that patients with chronic renal failure had a better outcome once we corrected for other variables. This difference may reflect the effect of study centers outside of developed countries, the greater numbers of variables available for analysis, and differences in the impact of premorbid care and comorbidites once patients from developing countries are included.

Fifth, although we did not have the resources to conduct an onsite data audit, all data inconsistencies were immediately resolved by electronic communication and data completeness was more than 99% at the time of statistical analysis. Nonetheless, the lack of independent data validation is a significant limitation of our database.

Finally, our database did not include long-term follow-up and thus the outcomes for patients following hospital discharge are unknown. For this reason, we chose not to analyze data using survival rates (eg, Cox proportional hazards) because we would have had to assume that survival postdischarge resembled in-hospital survival rates and this seems unlikely. Furthermore, our intent was to examine all-cause hospital mortality truncated at 28 days rather than survival rates because hospital mortality has been the most common end point for clinical trials of ARF. There is controversy as to whether prolonging in-hospital survival represents a benefit if hospital mortality is the same. However, the absence of postdischarge information is a significant limitation of our study.

In summary, we have conducted a multinational, multicenter, prospective, epidemiological study of ARF that includes the largest and most representative sample of ICUs and ARF patients so far. We found a period prevalence of ARF in the ICU of approximately 6%, with close to two thirds of such patients receiving RRT. In this study, premorbid renal dysfunction was common, sepsis was the dominant cause of ARF in the ICU, SAPS II scores underestimated mortality, and most survivors were dialysis-independent at hospital discharge. This information may be helpful in the design of future international interventional trials, which would apply to worldwide practice, in regard to the statistical power and choice of appropriate outcome measures.


AUTHOR INFORMATION
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Corresponding Author: John A. Kellum, MD, CRISMA Laboratory, Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh, 3550 Terrace St, Pittsburgh, PA 15261 (kellumja{at}ccm.upmc.edu).

Author Contributions: Dr Uchino had full access to all of the data in the study and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.

Study concept and design: Uchino, Kellum, Bellomo, Morgera, Ronco.

Acquisition of data: Uchino, Kellum, Bellomo, Morimatsu, Morgera, Schetz, Tan, Bouman, Macedo, Gibney, Tolwani.

Analysis and interpretation of data: Uchino, Kellum, Bellomo, Doig, Tan, Tolwani, Ronco.

Drafting of the manuscript: Uchino, Kellum, Bellomo, Tan, Gibney, Ronco.

Critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content: Uchino, Kellum, Bellomo, Doig, Morimatsu, Morgera, Schetz, Tan, Bouman, Macedo, Tolwani, Ronco.

Statistical analysis: Uchino, Kellum, Bellomo, Doig.

Obtained funding: Kellum, Bellomo.

Administrative, technical, or material support: Kellum, Bellomo, Tan, Gibney.

Study supervision: Kellum, Bellomo, Macedo, Ronco.

Financial Disclosures: None reported.

Funding/Support: This study was supported by an unrestricted educational grant from the Austin Hospital Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Trust Fund.

Role of the Sponsor: The Austin Hospital Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Trust Fund had no role in the design and conduct of the study; collection, management, analysis, or interpretation of the data; nor any role in preparation, review, or approval of the manuscript.

Participating Centers and Investigators
Australia: Intensive Care Unit, Austin and Repatriation Medical Center (Hiroshi Morimatsu, Rinaldo Bellomo); Department of Intensive Care, Western Hospital (Craig French); Intensive Care Unit, Epworth Foundation (John Mulder); Department of Intensive Care, Sir Charles Gairdner Hospital (Mary Pinder, Brigit Roberts); Intensive Care, Frankston Hospital (John Botha, Pradeen Mudholkar); Critical Care Unit, Flinders Medical Centre (Andrew Holt, Tamara Hunt). Belgium: Service de Soins Intensifs, Clinique Saint-Pierre (Patrick Maurice Honoré, Gaetan Clerbaux); Dienst Intensieve Geneeskunde, Universitair Ziekenhuis Gasthuisberg (Miet Schetz, Alexander Wilmer). Brazil: Nephrology Division, University of São Paulo School of Medicine (Luis Yu, Ettiene V. Macedo); Nephrology Division, do Hospital Servidor Público Estadual de São Paulo (Sandra Maria Rodriques Laranja, Cassio José Rodrigues); Nephrology Unit, Casa de Saúde São José/CDR Serviços Hospitalares (José Hermógenes Rocco Suassuna, Frederico Ruzany); Lutheran University of Brazil (Bruno Campos, Jayme Burmeister). Canada: Intensive Care, Maisonneuve-Rosemont Hospital (Martine Leblanc, Lynne Senécal); Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton (R. T. Noel Gibney, Curtis Johnston, Peter Brindley). China: Intensive Care Unit, Department of Anaesthesia, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital (Ian K. S. Tan); Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Beijing Chao Yang Hospital (Hui De Chen, Li Wan). Czech Republic: Intensive Care Unit, Department of Internal Medicine, Charles University Hospital Plzen (Richard Rokyta, Ales Krouzecky). Germany: Department of Nephrology, University Hospital Charité, CCM (Stanislao Morgera, Hans-Hellmut Neumayer); Klinik für Anaesthesiologie, Universitätsklinikum Duesseldorf (Kindgen-Milles Detlef, Eckhard Mueller). Greece: Intensive Care Unit, General Regional Hospital, "G. Papanikolau" (Vicky Tsiora, Kostas Sombolos). Indonesia: Intensive Care Unit, National Cardiovascular Center and Mitra Keluarga Hospital (Iqbal Mustafa, Iwayan Suranadi). Israel: Intermediate Intensive Care Unit, Rambam Medical Center (Yaron Bar-Lavie, Farid Nakhoul). Italy: Anesthesia and Intensive Care Unit, Cliniche Humanitas-Gavazzeni (Roberto Ceriani, Franco Bortone); Nephrology-Intensive Care, St Bortolo Hospital (Claudio Ronco, Nereo Zamperetti); Istituto di Anestesia e Rianimazione Servizio di Anestesia e Rianimazione per la Cardiochirurgia, Ospedale San Raffaele IRCCS Università Vita e Salute (Federico Pappalardo, Giovanni Marino); Unità Operativa di Rianimazione, Ospedale Vittorio Emanuele (Prospero Calabrese, Francesco Monaco); Anestesia e Rianimazione, City Hospital of Sesto San Giovanni (Chiara Liverani, Stefano Clementi); Intensive Care Unit, Surgical and Medical Emergencies Institute (Rosanna Coltrinari, Benedetto Marini). Japan: Intensive Care Center, Teikyo University School of Medicine Ichihara Hospital (Nobuo Fuke, Masaaki Miyazawa); Intensive Care Unit, Okayama University Hospital (Hiroshi Katayama, Toshiaki Kurasako); Department of Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Graduate School of Medicine, Chiba University (Hiroyuki Hirasawa, Shigeto Oda); Emergency and Critical Care Medicine, Fukuoka University Hospital (Koichi Tanigawa, Keiichi Tanaka). the Netherlands: Intensive Care Unit, Onze Lieve Vrouwe Gasthuis (Helena Maria Oudemans-Van Straaten); Adult Intensive Care Unit, Academic Medical Center (Catherine S. C. Bouman, Anne-Cornelie J. M. de Pont). Norway: Department of Anaesthesia, Rikshospitalet (Jan Frederik Bugge, Fridtjov Riddervold); Department of Anaestesiology, University and Regional Hospital, Tromsø (Paul Åge Nilsen, Joar Julsrud). Portugal: Unidade de Cuidados Intensivos (ICU), Hospital de Curry Cabral (Fernando Teixeira e Costa, Paulo Marcelino); Unidade de Cuidados Intensivos Polivalente, Hospital Fernando Fonseca (Isabel Maria Serra). Russia: Unit for Extracorporeal Blood Purification, Bakoulev Scientific Center for Cardiovascular Surgery (Mike Yaroustovsky, Rachik Grigoriyanc). Singapore: Medicine Department, National University of Singapore (Kang Hoe Lee); Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Tan Tock Seng Hospital (Shi Loo, Kulgit Singh). Spain: Anaesthesiology and Critical Care Department, Hospital Comarcal De Vinaros (Ferran Barrachina, Julio Llorens); Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Section of Severe Trauma, Hospital Universitario "12 de Octubre" (Jose Angel Sanchez-Izquierdo-Riera, Darío Toral-Vazquez). Sweden: Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Sunderby Hospital (Ivar Wizelius, Dan Hermansson). Switzerland: Department of Surgery, Surgery Intensive Care Unit and Department of Medicine, Medical Intensive Care Unit, University Hospital Zürich (Tomislav Gaspert, Marco Maggiorini). United Kingdom: Center for Nephrology, Royal Free Hospital (Andrew Davenport). United States: Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (Ramesh Venkataraman, John A. Kellum); Department of Medicine, Section of Nephrology, University of Chicago (Patrick Murray, Sharon Trevino); Surgical Intensive Care Unit, Mount Sinai Medical Center (Ernest Benjamin, Jerry Hufanda); Nephrology and Hypertension-M82, Cleveland Clinic Foundation (Emil Paganini); Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Alabama, Birmingham (Ashita Tolwani, David Warnock); Internal Medicine/Nephrology, University of Nebraska Medical Center (Nabil Guirguis). Uruguay: Department of Critical Care Medicine, Impasa (Raúl Lombardi, Teresita Llopart).

Author Affiliations: Departments of Intensive Care and Surgery, Austin Hospital, Melbourne, Australia (Drs Uchino, Bellomo, and Morimatsu); Department of Critical Care Medicine, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pa (Dr Kellum); Department of Medicine, University of Sydney and Royal North Shore Hospital, Sydney, Australia (Dr Doig); Department of Nephrology, University Hospital Charité, Berlin, Germany (Dr Morgera); Dienst Intensieve Geneeskunde, Universitair Ziekenhuis Gasthuisberg, Leuven, Belgium (Dr Schetz); Intensive Care Unit, Department of Anaesthesia, Pamela Youde Nethersole Eastern Hospital, Hong Kong, China (Dr Tan); Adult Intensive Care Unit, Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands (Dr Bouman); Nephrology Division, University of São Paulo School of Medicine, São Paulo, Brazil (Dr Macedo); Division of Critical Care Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton (Dr Gibney); Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, University of Alabama, Birmingham (Dr Tolwani); and Nephrology/Intensive Care, St Bortolo Hospital, Vicenza, Italy (Dr Ronco).


REFERENCES
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Caring for the Critically Ill Patient Section Editor: Deborah J. Cook, MD, Consulting Editor, JAMA.



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