Serum Estradiol Level Predicts Acute Kidney Injury in Medical Intensive Care Unit Patients
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Date
2022
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer-Verlag Italia Srl
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Previous studies have shown that serum estradiol (E2) levels can predict mortality in intensive care unit patients. Our study investigated the predictive role of admission estradiol level on patient mortality and development of acute kidney injury in medical intensive care unit patients with a wide range of diagnoses. We conducted a prospective cohort study using serum samples from hospitalized patients in medical, cardiac, and pulmonary intensive care units at the Ege University Hospital within 6 months. Serum estradiol levels from 118 adult patients were collected within 48 h of hospitalization. Receiver operating curves and multiple logistic regression analyses were performed to investigate its relationship with acute kidney injury development and mortality. Serum estradiol levels were significantly higher in non-survivor patients than in survivor patients [85 (19-560) pg/mL vs. 32 (3-262) pg/mL, p < 0.001]. Admission estradiol levels were significantly higher in patients with AKI on admission than in patients with chronic kidney disease (p = 0.002) and normal renal function (p = 0.017). Serum E2 levels were higher in patients with renal deterioration during follow-up than patients with stable renal functions [62 (11-560) pg/mL vs. 38 (3-456) pg/mL, p = 0.004]. An admission estradiol level of 52.5 pg/mL predicted follow-up renal deterioration with 63% sensitivity and 74% specificity. A combined (APACHE II-E) score using APACHE II and serum estradiol level predicted overall mortality with 66% sensitivity and 82% specificity. Admission estradiol level is a good marker to predict the development of acute kidney injury and mortality in medical intensive care unit patients.
Description
ORCID
Keywords
Estradiol, Acute kidney injury, Intensive care unit, Mortality, Long-Term Risk, Critically-Ill, Mortality, Admission, Illness, Events, Death, Sex, Aki, Adult, Estradiol, Intensive Care Unit, Events, Admission, Acute Kidney Injury, Long-Term Risk, Acute kidney injury, Death, Intensive Care Units, Aki, Critically-Ill, Humans, Intensive care unit, Sex, Prospective Studies, Mortality, Illness, APACHE
Fields of Science
03 medical and health sciences, 0302 clinical medicine
Citation
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
10
Source
Internal And Emergency Medıcıne
Volume
17
Issue
8
Start Page
2253
End Page
2260
PlumX Metrics
Citations
Scopus : 4
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 4
SCOPUS™ Citations
4
checked on Mar 18, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
4
checked on Mar 18, 2026
Google Scholar™

OpenAlex FWCI
0.5763
Sustainable Development Goals
3
GOOD HEALTH AND WELL-BEING


