This study aimed to investigate the association between blood urea nitrogen to serum albumin ratio (BAR) and the risk of in-hospital mortality in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis.
A total of 3,962 diabetic ketoacidosis patients from the eICU Collaborative Research Database were included in this analysis. The primary outcome was in-hospital death.
Over a median length of hospital stay of 3.1 days, 86 in-hospital deaths were identified. One unit increase in LnBAR was positively associated with the risk of in-hospital death (hazard ratio [HR], 1.82 [95% CI, 1.42–2.34]). Furthermore, a nonlinear, consistently increasing correlation between elevated BAR and in-hospital mortality was observed (P for trend =0.005 after multiple-adjusted). When BAR was categorized into quartiles, the higher risk of in-hospital death (multiple-adjusted HR, 1.99 [95% CI, (1.1–3.6)]) was found in participants in quartiles 3 to 4 (BAR≥6.28) compared with those in quartiles 1 to 2 (BAR<6.28). In the subgroup analysis, the LnBAR-hospital death association was significantly stronger in participants without kidney insufficiency (yes versus no, P-interaction=0.023).
There was a significant and positive association between BAR and the risk of in-hospital death in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. Notably, the strength of this association was intensified among those without kidney insufficiency.