BMJ | 2019

App to help spot acute kidney injury had no clinical benefits, study finds

 

Abstract


An alerting tool developed in cooperation with the Google company DeepMind to speed up the diagnosis of acute kidney injury has shown no clinical benefits when it was compared with normal care, a team from University College London and the Royal Free Hospital has concluded.\n\nAlthough the system worked as intended and led to earlier recognition of the reduced kidney function characteristic of AKI in patients admitted through the hospital’s emergency department, it did not lead to any improvements in the primary outcome measure (renal recovery) or in secondary outcomes, which included survival, length of stay in hospital, and admission to the intensive care unit.\n\nResults from patients who developed AKI during their hospital stay have also been collected but were not included in this study, published in Nature Digital Medicine .1 Unless results are more encouraging, the study will be a serious …

Volume 366
Pages None
DOI 10.1136/bmj.l5011
Language English
Journal BMJ

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