Circulation. 2011 Sep 13;124(11):1250-9. Epub 2011 Aug 22. (Original) PMID: 21859972
BACKGROUND: It remains uncertain whether acetylcysteine prevents contrast-induced acute kidney injury.
METHODS
AND RESULTS: We randomly assigned 2308 patients undergoing an
intravascular angiographic procedure with at least 1 risk factor for
contrast-induced acute kidney injury (age >70 years, renal failure,
diabetes mellitus, heart failure, or hypotension) to acetylcysteine 1200
mg or placebo. The study drugs were administered orally twice daily for
2 doses before and 2 doses after the procedure. The allocation was
concealed (central Web-based randomization). All analysis followed the
intention-to-treat principle. The incidence of contrast-induced acute
kidney injury (primary end point) was 12.7% in the acetylcysteine group
and 12.7% in the control group (relative risk, 1.00; 95% confidence
interval, 0.81 to 1.25; P=0.97). A combined end point of mortality or
need for dialysis at 30 days was also similar in both groups (2.2% and
2.3%, respectively; hazard ratio, 0.97; 95% confidence interval, 0.56 to
1.69; P=0.92). Consistent effects were observed in all subgroups
analyzed, including those with renal impairment.
CONCLUSIONS: In this
large randomized trial, we found that acetylcysteine does not reduce
the risk of contrast-induced acute kidney injury or other clinically
relevant outcomes in at-risk patients undergoing coronary and peripheral
vascular angiography. CLINICAL
TRIAL REGISTRATION(S): http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00736866.
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