Objectives: Recent studies have questioned whether intravascular iodinated contrast remains an independent cause of acute kidney injury (AKI). We sought to assess whether iodinated contrast administered during coronary angiography is an independent cause of AKI.
Methods: We identified all of the patients who underwent coronary angiography between July 1, 2015 and June 30, 2017 with a discharge diagnosis of AKI that developed within 7 days following angiography. Using chart review, we categorized patients as having multifactorial AKI if ≥1 insults other than intravascular contrast potentially contributed to kidney injury or contrast-induced AKI (CI-AKI) if the only insult was contrast administration. We compared the severity of AKI and renal function upon discharge between patients with CI-AKI and multifactorial AKI.
Results: We identified 78 patients who experienced AKI within 7 days following angiography, 10 (13%) of whom had CI-AKI and 68 of whom (87%) experienced multifactorial AKI. Nine (90%) patients with CI-AKI manifested stage 1 disease, 1 (10%) had stage 2 disease, and 9 (90%) experienced full recovery of kidney function. More patients with multifactorial AKI developed stage 2 or 3 disease (42% vs 10%, χ2 = 3.73, P = 0.05) and experienced either partial recovery of kidney function or persistent kidney impairment compared with patients with CI-AKI (25% vs 10%, χ2 = 1.9, P = 0.17), although the latter comparison was not statistically significant.
Conclusions: The intravascular administration of iodinated contrast remains an independent cause of AKI. Compared with those with multifactorial AKI, patients with CI-AKI appear to be more likely to experience mild decrements in kidney function that recover completely.