Renal Angina Index (RAI)
Definition and Purpose
- The Renal Angina Index (RAI) is a validated scoring system utilized primarily at the time of Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (ICU) admission to predict a child's risk of developing severe acute kidney injury (AKI).
- The index functions by combining baseline patient risk factors (such as a history of transplantation or the need for intensive life support) with early functional evidence of acute kidney injury (such as changes in serum creatinine or the degree of fluid overload).
- It serves as a critical early prognostication tool, identifying patients who are at a high risk for severe AKI early in their ICU course, which carries significant implications for initiating anticipatory and preventive management strategies.
- The scoring system specifically incorporates a patient's history of hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) into its risk grading, recognizing this as a highly significant predisposing factor for AKI.
Components and Scoring System
- The RAI score is calculated 12 hours after a patient's admission to the ICU.
- The final score is derived by multiplying a "Risk Score" by an "Injury Score," yielding a total score that ranges from 1 to 40.
- The Risk Score evaluates the patient's baseline clinical condition and therapeutic requirements upon ICU admission.
- The Injury Score evaluates early signs of renal dysfunction and utilizes the worst (highest scoring) parameter between the patient's serum creatinine (SCr) rise or their percentage of fluid overload.
- For the SCr calculation, the highest SCr value recorded between the time of ICU admission and 12 hours post-admission is divided by the patient's baseline SCr.
| Category | Clinical Criteria | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Risk Score | ICU admission (Default baseline risk) | 1 |
| Solid organ or stem cell transplantation | 3 | |
| Mechanical ventilation or vasoactive support | 5 | |
| Injury Score | Decrease or no change in SCr from baseline OR <5% Fluid Overload | 1 |
| (Use the worst score from either SCr rise or Fluid Overload) | >1 to 1.49 times baseline SCr OR 5โ10% Fluid Overload | 2 |
| 1.5 to 1.99 times baseline SCr OR 10โ15% Fluid Overload | 4 | |
| 8 |
Interpretation and Prognostic Implications
- A calculated RAI score of
8 is the defined threshold for "Renal Angina". - Derivation and validation studies demonstrate that an RAI score of
8 upon ICU admission is highly predictive of the patient developing Stage 2 or worse AKI by their third day in the ICU. - By accurately predicting severe AKI, the RAI helps clinicians implement early, targeted interventions to mitigate further kidney damage.
Integration with Novel AKI Biomarkers
- A major advancement in pediatric nephrology research is the combination of the clinical RAI score with novel AKI biomarkers to optimize predictive accuracy.
- This combined approach ensures that biomarker testing is deployed appropriately to the right high-risk patient population, rather than utilizing widespread, non-selective testing.
- When urinary biomarkers, specifically Neutrophil Gelatinase-Associated Lipocalin (NGAL), are measured in children who have an ICU admission RAI score of
8, the ability to predict Stage 2 or worse AKI by ICU Day 3 becomes near perfect.