The Acute Kidney Intervention and Pharmacotherapy (AKIP) List: Standardized List of Medications That Are Renally Eliminated and Nephrotoxic in the Acutely Ill.
Erin Frazee BarretoAlexis M GagganiBrandy N HernandezNabihah AmatullahColleen M CulleyBritney StottlemyerRaghavan MuruganTezcan Ozrazgat-BaslantiAzra BihoracJohn A KellumKianoush B KashaniAndrew D RuleSandra L Kane-Gillnull nullPublished in: The Annals of pharmacotherapy (2024)
The objective of this project was to develop a standardized list of renally eliminated and potentially nephrotoxic drugs that will help inform initiatives to improve medication safety. Several available lists of medications from the published literature including original research articles and reviews, and from regulatory agencies, tertiary references, and clinical decision support systems were compiled, consolidated, and compared. Only systemically administered medications were included. Medication combinations were included if at least 1 active ingredient was considered renally dosed or potentially nephrotoxic. The medication list was reviewed for completeness and clinical appropriateness by a multidisciplinary team of individuals with expertise in critical care, nephrology, and pharmacy. An initial list of renally dosed and nephrotoxic drugs was created. After reconciliation and consensus from clinical experts, a standardized list of 681 drugs is proposed. The proposed evidence-based standardized list of renally dosed and potentially nephrotoxic drugs will be useful to harmonize epidemiologic and medication quality improvement studies. In addition, the list can be used for clinical purposes with surveillance in nephrotoxin stewardship programs. We suggest an iterative re-evaluation of the list with emerging literature and new medications on an approximately annual basis.
Keyphrases
- quality improvement
- healthcare
- systematic review
- clinical decision support
- public health
- randomized controlled trial
- adverse drug
- drug induced
- patient safety
- transcription factor
- magnetic resonance imaging
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- clinical practice
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- image quality
- aortic dissection
- dual energy