Impact on mortality at 90 days of acute kidney injuries in endovascularly treated stroke: A systematic review, meta-analysis, and meta-regression

Neuroradiol J. 2024 Nov 21:19714009241303134. doi: 10.1177/19714009241303134. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Aim: To investigate the prognostic implication (mortality at 3 months) of acute kidney injury (AKI) in acute ischemic stroke treated with mechanical thrombectomy (MT).

Material and methods: A literature search was performed using PubMed/OVID/Cochran's CENTRAL database (time frame: inception to January 2023). Study characteristics, patient status, clinical outcomes, AKI incidence, and sample size were recorded. The exclusion criteria were non-English literature, no human subjects, and <10 patients as the sample size. Studies were assessed using the MINORS/GRADE system. Meta-analysis and meta-regression with a random-effects model were performed.

Results: 3314 studies were retrieved. After applying the exclusion criteria, the final population included of 18/3314 studies (0.5%). Among them, only 6/18 (33.3%) studies reported results in two separate groups (AKI vs non-AKI), allowing for inference statistics for a total population of 3229 (538.6 ± 403.7). The I^2 was 34.6 and Q's Cochrane was 7.80. The pooled odds ratio (OR) for mortality at 3 months in patients with AKI was 5.8 (95% confidence interval [95% CI] 95% CI 3.62 to 9.52). Leave-one-out meta-analysis showed no significant sources of heterogeneity. In the meta-regression, diabetes prevalence was associated with a higher mortality rate (OR 1.14, 95% CI 1.03 to 1.28), and lower age and a small amount of contrast media were negatively correlated (0.91 [95% CI 0.83 to 0.99] and OR 0.97 [95% CI 0.94 to 1.00], respectively).

Conclusion: AKI was significantly associated with the mortality rate in MT-treated stroke patients (OR 5.8 [95% CI 3.62 to 9.36]).

Keywords: Stroke; acute kidney injury; contrast media; diabetes; mechanical thrombolysis.