ALBICS-AKI
Postoperative 20% Albumin Infusion for Acute Kidney Injury in High-Risk Cardiac Surgery.
Shehabi et al.. JAMA Surgery 2025; doi:10.1001/jamasurg.2025.1683
Clinical Question
Amongst patients undergoing high risk cardiac surgery, does the administration of 20% Human Albumin Solution, compared to standard care, reduce the risk of post-operative acute kidney injury?
The primary outcome was the occurrence of stage 1-3 AKI (KDIGO criteria) up to 7 days after surgery.
Background
- Acute kidney injury occurs in close to 30% of individuals undergoing cardiac surgery, with an associated 3-28 fold increased risk of mortality and long-term renal dysfunction.
- Hypoalbuminaemia is observed in over 90% of cardiac surgery patients and correlates with AKI severity and mortality. It remains unclear whether albumin represents a modifiable therapeutic target or a marker of illness severity
- The original ALBICS trial (Lee et al, Anesthesiology 2016) demonstrated nephroprotective effects of 20% albumin when given before off-pump cardiac surgery, providing rationale for further investigation in on-pump surgery
- Recent guidelines highlighted the lack of evidence for albumin use in high-risk cardiac surgical patients and called for targeted trials (Callum et al, CHEST 2024)
Design
- Multicentre, open-label, parallel-group randomised controlled trial.
- 1:1 randomisation in permuted blocks with fixed block size, stratified by site and eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73m².
- Open-label trial: patients and clinicians were unblinded.
- A modified intention-to-treat analysis was performed using generalised linear mixed models with binomial log link, adjusted for site and eGFR status.
- 620 participants required to give 80% power to detect a 10% reduction in the primary outcome, and an alpha = 0.05. The calculation assumed a 30% AKI rate in the control group and accounted for 5% drop-out.
- A pre-planned sensitivity analysis was performed to assess those patients in the control group who received > 500mL of 4% or 5% HAS.
Setting
- 7 cardiothoracic centres (6 Australian, 1 Italian) between July 2019 and August 2024.
- Recruitment was significantly impacted by COVID-19, with 90% of enrolment occurring between July 2022 and August 2024.
Population
- Inclusion criteria.
Adult patients having on-pump surgery, including either:
- Combined cardiac surgery
- Surgery on the thoracic aorta
- Any cardiac surgery with eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73m²
- Exclusion criteria
- ICU admission > 6 hours post-surgery
- eGFR < 15 ml/min/1.73m²
- Albumin < 20g/L
- Dialysis dependent or renal transplant recipient
- Off pump surgery
- ECMO or VAD recipients
- Objections to receiving albumin or blood products
- Participant numbers
- 954 patients screened, 621 randomised
- Modified Intention To Treat population:
- 307 intervention, 304 control
- Patient characteristics.
Baseline characteristics were well balanced, representing contemporary high-risk cardiac surgical patients. Notable differences included higher diabetes rates in the control group (32% vs 27%) and higher AMI history (16% vs 14%).
Characteristic | 20% Albumin (n=307) | Usual Care (n=304) |
Age, mean (SD) | 69.1 (11.0) | 68.9 (10.6) |
Male, % | 70.7% | 74.7% |
Weight, mean (SD), kg | 81.7 (19.0) | 83.0 (19.1) |
APACHE III score | 50.7 (15.1) | 51.8 (14.4) |
EuroSCORE II, median (IQR) | 3.16 (1.91-5.18) | 3.30 (1.91-5.34) |
Diabetes, % | 27% | 32% |
Previous MI, % | 14% | 16% |
eGFR <60 ml/min/1.73m², % | 46% | 46% |
CPB time, median (SD), min | 137 (49.6) | 138 (56.4) |
Cross-clamp time, mean (SD), min | 105 (40.5) | 106 (45.6) |
- Comparison of perioperative data
- More Aortic surgeries in control group (33% vs 26%)
- CBP time very similar 137mins in intervention vs 138mins in control.
- Cross clamp time 105 mins in intervention vs 106 mins in control.
- End CPB haematocrit 30% in both groups.
- Similar intra-operative vasoactive and blood product administration.
- Cardiovascular supports at end of CPB well balanced: Noradrenaline / Adrenaline / Milrinone / IABP.
Intervention
- 20% Albumin Group: 300mL of 20% Human Albumin Solution at 20ml/hr over 15 hours, commenced within 6 hours of ICU admission.
Control
- Standard care at discretion of treating clinicians. No 20% albumin permitted for first 24 hours. Administration of 4% or 5% albumin permitted.
Management common to both groups
- Intraoperative management was similar between groups: comparable CPB times, cross-clamp times, and vasoactive support.
- Post-operatively, both groups received standard ICU care including crystalloid resuscitation, with iso-oncotic albumin (4-5%) permitted in the first 24 hours.
- Use of diuretics, initiation of renal replacement therapy and ventilation management and weaning, were all at the discretion of the treating clinicians.
Outcomes
- Primary Outcome: occurrence of KDIGO stage 1-3 AKI
- 20% albumin increased the risk of AKI compared to usual care.
Analysis | 20% Albumin | Usual Care | Adjusted RR (95% CI) | P value |
Overall AKI | 150/307 (48.9%) | 132/304 (43.4%) | 1.12 (1.04-1.21) | 0.003 |
eGFR ≥60 ml/min/1.73m² | 56/165 (33.9%) | 52/165 (31.5%) | 1.07 (0.83-1.38) | 0.59 |
eGFR <60 ml/min/1.73m² | 94/142 (66.2%) | 80/139 (57.6%) | 1.14 (1.07-1.22) | <0.001 |
Sensitivity analysis* | 1.14 (1.01-1.30) | 0.04 |
*Excluding control patients who received >500mL of 4% albumin
Statistically significant outcomes favouring usual care occurred in pre-specified subgroups including patients without diabetes, those with >2 hours CPB time, and those with mild or no LV dysfunction.
Sensitivity analysis
- Among those in usual care group who received > 500mLs of 4% HAS.
- Consistent with primary data:
- Adjusted RR of 1.14 (1.01 – 1.3, p = 0.04).
Secondary Outcomes
- No statistically significant differences in
- Major Adverse Kidney Events (MAKE) at 28 days.
- Sustained AKI II or III.
- RRT to D28
- Hospital mortality at D28 (2% in intervention vs 0.7% in control)
- Hospital and ICU LoS.
- Duration of mechanical ventilation.
- Vasopressor / inotrope free days at D14,
Tertiary outcomes
- Serum albumin at 24 hrs.
- At the end of the first 24 hours, serum albumin levels were higher in the albumin group with a mean (SD) of 37.4 (8.4) vs 32.1 (6.5) g/L in the usual care groups, respectively (P < .001).
- Blood transfusion requirements at D2.
- Higher rates of post-operative blood transfusion in intervention arm (38% vs 30%, p = 0.04)
- No difference in:
- Fluid balance at 24 hrs.
- Fluid balance at D2.
- Fluid overload.
- Re-intubation.
- ICU re-admission.
- Arrythmia requiring CV compromise.
Authors’ Conclusions
In cardiac surgery patients at increased risk of AKI, a continuous infusion of 20% albumin for 15 hours after surgery did not confer significant benefits and may increase the risk of post-operative AKI, particularly in patients with eGFR < 60 ml/min/1.73m².
Strengths
- Rigorous, pragmatic randomised clinical trial addressing genuine clinical equipoise
- Strong methodological design with pre-specified statistical analysis plan
- Good internal and external validity to Australian cardiothoracic ICUs
- Well-matched baseline characteristics and intraoperative management
- Robust findings consistent across sensitivity analyses and subgroup analyses
- Systematic review and meta-analysis by the same group supports conclusions
Weaknesses
- Open-label design permits potential treatment bias. Although a biochemically derived primary outcome is less prone to reporting and ascertainment biases.
- Primary outcome is biomarker-based rather than patient-centred
- AKI definition used creatinine criteria only, not urine output criteria
- Death as competing risk not statistically accounted for
- One centre contributed one-third of recruitment without statistical adjustment
- COVID-19 disruption prolonged recruitment timeline
- Late addition of Italian centre (10% of patients) with different treatment effect
- Usual care group received significantly greater volumes of iso-oncotic albumin, potentially confounding the results.
The Bottom Line
- 20% albumin infusion after high-risk cardiac surgery increases rather than prevents C-AKI, particularly in patients with pre-existing renal impairment (eGFR <60 ml/min/1.73m²)
- The significant increase in blood transfusion requirements (38% vs 30%) raises important questions about albumin’s impact on haemostasis and bleeding risk in cardiac surgery patients.
- These data do not support routine use of 20% albumin for AKI prevention and suggest clinicians should consider bleeding risk when considering albumin administration in cardiac surgical patients.
- Future research should investigate mechanisms underlying increased bleeding complications with albumin use in this high-risk population.
External Links
- article https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/fullarticle/2835041
- https://criticalcarereviews.com/meetings/ccr-down-under
Metadata
Summary author: Philip Emerson
Summary date: 7th July 2025
Peer-review editor: Aniket Nadkarni