Featured Publications
The Association of COVID-19 With Acute Kidney Injury Independent of Severity of Illness: A Multicenter Cohort Study
Moledina DG, Simonov M, Yamamoto Y, Alausa J, Arora T, Biswas A, Cantley LG, Ghazi L, Greenberg JH, Hinchcliff M, Huang C, Mansour SG, Martin M, Peixoto A, Schulz W, Subair L, Testani JM, Ugwuowo U, Young P, Wilson FP. The Association of COVID-19 With Acute Kidney Injury Independent of Severity of Illness: A Multicenter Cohort Study. American Journal Of Kidney Diseases 2021, 77: 490-499.e1. PMID: 33422598, PMCID: PMC7791318, DOI: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2020.12.007.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAcute Kidney InjuryAgedCohort StudiesCOVID-19C-Reactive ProteinCreatinineDiureticsFemaleHospital MortalityHumansIntensive Care UnitsLength of StayMaleMiddle AgedProportional Hazards ModelsRenal DialysisRenal Insufficiency, ChronicRespiration, ArtificialRisk FactorsSARS-CoV-2Severity of Illness IndexUnited StatesVasoconstrictor AgentsConceptsAcute kidney injurySARS-CoV-2Cohort studyRisk factorsCOVID-19Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) testingTime-updated Cox proportional hazards modelsDialysis-requiring acute kidney injuryYale New Haven Health SystemHigher inflammatory marker levelsMore acute kidney injuryCox proportional hazards modelMulticenter cohort studyHigh rateInflammatory marker levelsTraditional risk factorsProportional hazards modelCoronavirus disease 2019KDIGO criteriaNephrotoxin exposureKidney injuryInjury independentUnivariable analysisNasopharyngeal samplesMarker levels
2017
Approaches to Predicting Outcomes in Patients with Acute Kidney Injury
Saly D, Yang A, Triebwasser C, Oh J, Sun Q, Testani J, Parikh CR, Bia J, Biswas A, Stetson C, Chaisanguanthum K, Wilson FP. Approaches to Predicting Outcomes in Patients with Acute Kidney Injury. PLOS ONE 2017, 12: e0169305. PMID: 28122032, PMCID: PMC5266278, DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169305.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsAcute kidney injuryLength of stayKidney injuryReceiver operator characteristic curveOutcomes of interestOperator characteristic curveValidation cohortClinical eventsAccurate prognosticationOutcome eventsPredicting OutcomePrognostic modelDeath predictionLab valuesCharacteristic curveGood discrimination abilityPatientsStayInjuryDialysisModel discriminationOutcomesDaysMedicationsMorbidity
2011
Vancomycin levels are frequently subtherapeutic during continuous venovenous hemodialysis (CVVHD)
Wilson FP, Berns JS. Vancomycin levels are frequently subtherapeutic during continuous venovenous hemodialysis (CVVHD). Clinical Nephrology 2011, 77: 329-331. PMID: 22445477, PMCID: PMC3359699, DOI: 10.5414/cn106993.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsContinuous renal replacement therapyContinuous venovenous hemodialysisAcute kidney injuryRenal replacement therapyPopulation of patientsDialysis flow rateKidney injuryVancomycin levelsIntensive careReplacement therapyIntermittent dialysisSubtherapeutic levelsLow bloodNephrology traineesAntibioticsHemodialysisPatientsInjuryTherapyPopulationVancomycinBloodDialysisCare