Longitudinal Changes in Serum Creatinine Levels and Urinary Biomarkers in Late Preterm Infants during the First Postnatal Week: Association with Acute Kidney Injury and Treatment with Aminoglycoside

Children (Basel). 2021 Oct 9;8(10):896. doi: 10.3390/children8100896.

Abstract

We aimed to determine the incidence of acute kidney injury (AKI) and longitudinal changes in SCr levels and urinary biomarkers associated with AKI and aminoglycoside (AG) medication during the first week of life of late preterm infants. Urine biomarkers and SCr were measured in thirty late preterm infants on days one, two, five, and seven postnatal. Urine biomarkers included neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), monocyte chemotactic protein-1 (MCP-1), epidermal growth factor (EGF), Tamm-Horsfall glycoprotein (THP), and liver fatty-acid-binding protein (L-FABP). Gestational age was positively correlated with SCr levels at birth, but inversely correlated with SCr levels at day five and day seven. Eighteen (60%) infants had stage 1 AKI, and twenty (67%) infants were treated with AGs. Infants with AKI had lower gestational age and lower birth weight than those without AKI. Urinary biomarkers adjusted according to uCr levels in infants with AKI were not statistically different from those in infants without AKI. There were no significant differences in incidence of AKI, and SCr levels during and after cessation of AG treatment. The uMCP-1/Cr ratio at days five and seven was higher in infants treated with AG than in non-treated infants.

Keywords: acute kidney injury; aminoglycoside; serum creatinine; urinary biomarkers.