Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up

Researchers find white blood cell indicators predict kidney injury in advanced colorectal cancer

Share
Researchers find white blood cell indicators predict kidney injury in advanced colorectal cancer
Photo by julien Tromeur / Unsplash

Researchers studied a model using white blood cell-related indicators to predict acute kidney injury in critically ill patients with advanced colorectal cancer. The study included 981 patients from two hospital databases.

The model showed acceptable ability to predict acute kidney injury, with an AUC of 0.746 in the training group and 0.716 in the validation group. It also showed predictive ability for in-hospital mortality. About 24% to 27% of patients developed acute kidney injury.

The study was observational and retrospective, so it shows an association, not causation. The model's performance was based on confidence intervals, and external validation was limited to one hospital. No safety concerns were reported, as the study did not test a treatment.

The main reason to be careful is that this is an early, observational model. It may help identify patients at higher risk, but it does not prove that white blood cell changes cause kidney injury. Readers should see this as a potential tool for risk assessment, not a definitive guide for care.

What this means for you:
A white blood cell-based model may help predict kidney injury risk in advanced colorectal cancer patients, but more validation is needed.
Share
More on Acute Kidney Injury