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Doctors reveal new model predicting kidney injury post common heart procedure

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 23 (ANI): Doctors have come up with a new mathematical model that can predict the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) in patients undergoing a common heart procedure.

ANI Nov 23, 2019 19:30 IST googleads

Previous models assumed that exposure to contrast produced the same risk for everyone, but it is not one-size-fits-all.

Washington D.C. [USA], Nov 23 (ANI): Doctors have come up with a new mathematical model that can predict the risk of acute kidney injury (AKI) in patients undergoing a common heart procedure.
For patients treated with a percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), commonly known as angioplasty, exposure to contrast agents, a material used in the procedure to help visualize blood vessels, can harm the kidneys.
The new tool will enable doctors to make better pre-procedure estimates of risk and provide more personalized estimates for how much contrast material can safely be used when inserting stents in blocked or narrowed blood vessels near the heart, the researchers said. A new study describing the research appears in the journal JAMA Network Open.
"The previous models assumed that exposure to contrast produced the same risk for everyone, but it is not one-size-fits-all. There are individual differences," said Harlan Krumholz, M.D., cardiologist, and director of the Yale Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation (CORE).
For the new study, the researchers developed a machine learning model, a type of artificial intelligence, for estimating patients' risk of AKI before their heart procedure, while also accounting for the complexity of associations between contrast levels and AKI in different risk groups. The new model was then able to predict AKI risk injury more accurately than previous models, the researchers said.
Previous tools to estimate risk have not employed modern mathematical approaches or included information about the patients and their contrast exposure, they noted.
"We determined that their associations with the risk of kidney injury are quite complex. The range of contrast levels you're considering matters, and the baseline risk level for particular patient matters, too," said Chenxi Huang, an associate research scientist at Yale and first author of the study. (ANI)

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