Renal failure in 57 925 patients undergoing coronary procedures using iso-osmolar or low-osmolar contrast media
- PMID: 17003814
- DOI: 10.1038/sj.ki.5001887
Renal failure in 57 925 patients undergoing coronary procedures using iso-osmolar or low-osmolar contrast media
Abstract
We compared the Swedish Coronary Angiography and Angioplasty Registry with the Swedish 'Hospital Discharge Register' to assess contrast media (CM)-induced renal failure. Hospitals used only one type CM. From 2000 to 2003, iodixanol (iso-osmolar) was used in 45 485 patients, ioxaglate (low osmolar) in 12 440 subjects. To include the earlier used CM iohexol (low osmolar), analysis extended back to 1990 (86 334 patients). Incidence of clinically significant renal failure was greatest for patients receiving the iso-osmolar CM iodixanol (1.7%). Ioxaglate-treated patients had a significantly lower renal failure incidence (0.8%, P<0.001). The odds ratio for iodixanol-treated patients was significantly higher than for ioxaglate (1 vs 0.48, P<0.001). In subsets of either diabetic patients or patients with previous renal failure, odds ratios for renal failure remained greater in the iodixanol groups (P<0.01). Hospitals switching CM to iodixanol experienced a doubling in clinically significant renal failure after cardiac procedures. Dialysis was required in 0.2% of patients receiving iodixanol, which was significantly higher (P<0.01) than for ioxaglate-treated patients (0.1%). Iohexol-treated patients had a similar low risk for developing clinically significant renal failure (0.9%) as ioxaglate. In conclusion, risk of developing renal failure and required dialysis after coronary procedures is higher when patients received iodixanol than ioxaglate or iohexol.
Comment in
-
Iodixanol vs ioxaglate for preventing contrast nephropathy: who is winner?Kidney Int. 2007 Apr;71(8):828; author reply 828-9. doi: 10.1038/sj.ki.5002211. Kidney Int. 2007. PMID: 17429424 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Substances
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources