3,444
Views
10
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Clinical Study

Incidence, characteristics and prognosis of acute kidney injury in Cameroon: a prospective study at the Douala General Hospital

, , , , , , , & show all
Pages 30-37 | Received 26 Sep 2017, Accepted 14 Dec 2017, Published online: 29 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

Objective: There are limited data on AKI in sub-Saharan Africa. We aim to determine the incidence, characteristics and prognosis of AKI in Cameroon.

Patients and methods: A prospective study including all consenting acute admissions in the internal medicine and the ICU of a tertiary referral hospital in Cameroon from January 2015 to June 2016. Serum creatinine assay was done on admission, days 2 and 7 to diagnose AKI. For patients with AKI, serum creatinine was done on discharge, days 30, 60 and 90. AKI was defined according to the modified KDIGO 2012 criteria as an increase or decrease in serum creatinine of 3 mg/l or greater, or an increase of 50% or more from the reference value obtained at admission or the known baseline value. AKI severity was graded using KDIGO2012 criteria. Outcome measures were renal recovery, mortality and causes of death. Renal recovery was complete if serum creatinine between the first 90 days was less than baseline or reference, partial if less than diagnosis but not baseline or reference, no-recovery if creatinine did not decrease or if the patient remained on dialysis.

Results: Of the 2402 patients included, 536 developed AKI giving a global incidence of 22.3% and annual incidence of 15 per 100 patients-years. Of the 536 patients with AKI, 43.3% were at stage 3, 54.7% were males, median age was 56 years. Pre-renal AKI (61.4%) and acute tubular necrosis (28.9%) were the most frequent forms. Main etiologies were sepsis (50.4%) and volume depletion (31.6%). Renal outcome was unknown in 34% of patients. Of the 354 patients with known renal function at 3 months, 84.2% recovered completely, 14.7% partially and 1.1% progressed to CKD. Global mortality rate was 36.9% mainly due to sepsis.

Conclusions: AKI is frequent in our setting, mainly due to sepsis and hypovolemia. It carries a poor prognosis.

Acknowledgements

We thank all the patients who participated in this study and the staff of the ICU and Internal medicine ward.

Disclosure statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.