Interleukin-18 and Gelsolin Are Associated with Acute Kidney Disease after Cardiac Catheterization.
Po-Yen KuoKai-Fan TsaiPo-Jung WuPai-Chin HsuChien-Hsing WuWen-Chin LeeHsiu-Yu FangChih-Yuan FangSheng-Ying ChungYung-Lung ChenTerry Ting-Yu ChiouPublished in: Biomolecules (2023)
Patients undergoing cardiac catheterization are at high risk of post-procedure acute kidney injury (AKI) and may experience persistent renal damage after an initial insult, a state known as acute kidney disease (AKD). However, the association between AKD and urinary renal biomarkers has not yet been evaluated in this population. We enrolled 94 patients who underwent elective cardiac catheterization to investigate patterns of urinary renal biomarkers and their associations with post-procedure AKD. Serial urinary renal biomarker levels were measured during pre-procedure, early post-procedure (12-24 h), and late post-procedure (7-10 days) periods. In our investigation, 42.55% of the enrolled patients developed AKD during the late post-procedure period. While the liver-type free-fatty-acid-binding protein level increased sharply during the early post-procedure period, it returned to baseline during the late post-procedure period. In contrast, interleukin-18 (IL-18) levels increased steadily during the post-procedure period. Early post-procedure ratios of IL-18 and gelsolin (GSN) were independently associated with subsequent AKD (odds ratio (95% confidence interval), 4.742 (1.523-14.759) for IL-18 ratio, p = 0.007; 1.812 (1.027-3.198) for GSN ratio, p = 0.040). In conclusion, post-procedure AKD is common and associated with early changes in urinary IL-18 and GSN in patients undergoing cardiac catheterization.