DEVELOPMENT SITE ONLY
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
Please use current guidelines available on the UHNM intranet for patient treatment
PREVENTION
- Extremely important
- Development of contrast associated acute kidney injury (CA-AKI) is associated with:
- permanent renal impairment in up to 30% of patients
- a greater than five-fold increase in mortality
- prolonged hospital stay
Risk factors
Fixed (non-modifiable)
- Pre-existing renal insufficiency
- eGFR <45 mL/min increases risk significantly
- Diabetes mellitus
- Aged >75 yr
- Congestive cardiac failure
- New York Heart Association (NYHA) Class 3–4 or ejection fraction <49%
- Acute myocardial infarction
- Cardiogenic shock
- Renal transplantation
- Cirrhosis of the liver
- Myeloma
Modifiable risk factors
- Volume of contrast medium used
- Hypotension/volume depletion/sepsis
- Intra-aortic balloon pump
- Anaemia and blood loss
- ACE inhibitors
- Diuretics
- Nephrotoxic antimicrobials
- NSAIDs
- For other medication, check BNF
REQUESTING
- When requesting imaging procedures that may require use of intravascular (particularly intra-arterial) contrast media, indicate baseline serum creatinine or eGFR on the request
- If patient acutely sick, notify imaging department if serum creatinine (eGFR) has changed since the request was made and ensure up to date result requested
In patients at the extremes of age and body size, with severe malnutrition, paraplegia, tetraplegia, known skeletal muscle disease or rapidly changing renal function, interpret eGFR with caution as it may underestimate the severity of renal impairment
If eGFR ≤30 mL/min
- Review carefully with a consultant/SpR radiologist and consultant in charge of patient the risk versus benefit of iodinated contrast and suitability of alternative media
- vascular imaging may be possible using CO2 as alternative contrast medium
- use of iso-osmolar contrast media and reduced volumes may reduce risk
- use sodium chloride 0.9% flush in the imaging department to maximise image quality and reduce contrast dose
PREPARATION OF PATIENT
eGFR >30 mL/min
- Ensure adequate oral intake
- Only if patient nil-by-mouth or unable to drink adequately, give IV fluids before angiography ensuring adequate hydration
- Patients who are nil-by-mouth for planned anaesthesia to drink clear fluids until 2 hr before anaesthesia
- Review medication and, where clinically appropriate, omit potentially nephrotoxic drugs (see Modifiable risk factors above and BNF) on day of scan
- To proceed with IV contrast where the eGFR is >30 mL/min but <45 mL/min, the protocolling radiologist documents eGFR in the CRIS comments with the precautionary measures required
eGFR ≤30 mL/min or acute kidney injury
- Omit/reduce diuretics on day of scan
- If patient is on metformin and has eGFR ≤30 mL/min, omit it on day of scan and do not reinstate it for 48 hr afterwards
Fluid management for patients with eGFR ≤30mL/min or AKI
- If patient already on intravenous fluid replacement with sodium chloride 0.9% this is acceptable as prevention for CA-AKI
- If time allows, intravenous sodium chloride 0.9% 12 hr pre- and 12 hr post-contrast at a minimum of 1 mL/kg/hr is acceptable
OR
- Give sodium bicarbonate 1.26% 3 mL/kg (actual body weight) IV over 1 hr pre-contrast, followed by sodium bicarbonate 1.26% 1 mL/kg/hr IV for 6 hr post-contrast
- If sodium bicarbonate 1.26% polyfusor not available, sodium bicarbonate 1.4% can be substituted
MONITORING
- After procedure, daily monitoring of renal function for 48–72 hr
REPEAT EXPOSURE
- If further exposure to contrast agents required, because of need for repeat/additional procedure, and patient has no major risk factors, delay exposure for >48 hr
- if major risk factors present, delay for >72 hr