| Literature DB >> 28913589 |
Maharajan Raman1,2, Rachel J Middleton3,4, Philip A Kalra3,4, Darren Green3,4.
Abstract
Estimates of glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) should provide accurate measure of an individual's kidney function because important clinical decisions such as timing of renal replacement therapy and drug dosing may be dependent on eGFR. Formulae from which eGFR is derived are generally based on serum creatinine measurement, such as Cockcroft-Gault, MDRD and CKD-EPI. More recently, calculation of eGFR using other laboratory biomarkers such as cystatin C has emerged with apparent greater accuracy. In old people, there is age-related physiological change in the kidney, which could lead to reduced GFR. Likewise, physiological changes in body composition that occur with the ageing process impede the use of a single creatinine-based calculation of eGFR across all adult age groups. Studies have shown differences in the prevalence of CKD based on the type of equation used to estimate GFR. This review discusses the evolution of eGFR calculations and the relative accuracy of such equations in older population.Entities:
Keywords: Estimation of GFR; Old people; Renal function
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28913589 PMCID: PMC5643354 DOI: 10.1007/s11255-017-1682-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Urol Nephrol ISSN: 0301-1623 Impact factor: 2.370
Fig. 1The nonlinear relationship between serum creatinine and GFR. This figure compares an increase in creatinine of 200 µmol/L (2.26 mg/dL) from two start points in a 70-year-old male. An increase in creatinine from 100 to 300 µmol/L (1.13–3.39 mg/dL) (A) equates to a drop in GFR of 51 mL/min (from 70 to 19 mL/min), whereas an increase in creatinine from 300 to 500 µmol/L (3.39–5.65 mg/dL) (B) equates to a GFR drop of only 4 mL/min (from 11 to 7 mL/min). This demonstrates that numerically similar changes in creatinine indicate far greater deterioration in kidney function for patients with better-preserved renal function at baseline
Variables used in current and historical equations for estimation of glomerular filtration rate from serum creatinine
| Equation | Year | Variables used |
|---|---|---|
| FAS [ | 2016 | Age, sex, Scr/ |
| BIS1 [ | 2012 | Age, sex, Scr |
| CKI-EPI [ | 2009 | Age, sex, Scr, ethnicity |
| MDRD serum variable [ | 1999 | Age, sex, Scr, ethnicity |
| Bjornsson [ | 1983 | Age, sex, Scr, weight |
| Hull [ | 1982 | Age, sex, Scr, weight |
| Gates [ | 1982 | Age, sex, Scr |
| Cockcroft–Gault [ | 1976 | Age, sex, Scr, weight |
| Jellifie [ | 1973 | Age, sex, Scr |
| Mawer [ | 1972 | Age, sex, Scr, weight |
| Jellifie [ | 1971 | Sex, Scr |
| Reciprocal serum creatinine | – | Scr |
S serum creatinine, Q median Scr from healthy population
2012 KDIGO chronic kidney disease (CKD) categories based on eGFR [35]
| CKD category | eGFR (ml/min/1.73 m2) | Term |
|---|---|---|
| G1 | >90 | Normal |
| G2 | 60–89 | Mildly decreased |
| G3a | 45–59 | Mild to moderately decreased |
| G3b | 30–44 | Moderate to severely decreased |
| G4 | 15–29 | Severely decreased |
| G5 | <15 | Kidney failure |
Comparisons of performance of creatinine-derived eGFR equations in elderly patients from different study groups
| References | Age (years) |
| mGFR method | mGFR (ml/min/1.73 m2) | eGFR equation | Bias | P30 | Best performance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pottel et al. [ | 70c | 1764 | Variousd | 55.6 | FAS | 1.1 | 86.1 | FAS |
| CKD-EPI | −5.6 | 77.6 | ||||||
| Fan et al. [ | 80a | 805 | Iohexol | 62 ± 17 | BIS1 | 5.7 | 95.8 | BIS1 |
| CKD-EPI | −2.7 | 91.7 | ||||||
| Alshaer et al. [ | 80b | 394 | Iohexol | 53 (7–101) | BIS1 | 3.6 | 88 | BIS1 |
| CKD-EPI | −2.3 | 83 | ||||||
| Kilbride et al. [ | 80b | 394 | Iohexol | 53 (7–101) | MDRD | −3.5 | 81 | CKD-EPI |
| CKD-EPI | −1.7 | 83 | ||||||
| Schaeffner et al. [ | 79a | 285 | Iohexol | 60 (16–117) | BIS1 | −0.8 | 95.1 | BIS1 |
| MDRD | −11.2 | 70.9 | ||||||
| CKD-EPI | −9.6 | 77.9 | ||||||
| Stevens et al. [ | 71b | 476 | Variousd | <60 | MDRD | 3.3 | – | MDRD |
| CKD-EPI | 4.3 | – | ||||||
| 85 | 60–89 | MDRD | 5.9 | – | CKD-EPI | |||
| CKD-EPI | 1.0 | – | ||||||
| Lopes et al. [ | 85a | 56 | Iohexol | <60 | BIS1 | 1.9 | 80 | BIS1 |
| CKD-EPI | −3.6 | 75 | ||||||
| MDRD | −5.9 | 71 | ||||||
| 39 | ≥60 | BIS1 | 13.4 | 82 | CKD-EPI | |||
| CKD-EPI | 1.0 | 90 | ||||||
| MDRD | −2.7 | 80 | ||||||
| Koppe et al. [ | 75a | 224 | Inulin | 41 ± 17 | BIS1 | −4.1 | 76 | BIS1 |
| MDRD | −5.8 | 71 | ||||||
| CKD-EPI | −5.4 | 72 | ||||||
| Liu et al. [ | 70a | 332 | 99mTc-DTPA | 40 (24–117) | MDRD | 1.78 | 55 | BIS1 |
| CKD-EPI | −1.88 | 55 | ||||||
| BIS1 | −0.31 | 63 |
MDRD modification of diet in renal disease, CKD-EPI Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration, BIS Berlin initiative study P percentage of eGFR within 30% of the measured GFR (accuracy), eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, FAS full age spectrum
a Mean age
b Median age
c Age over 70 years
d Measured GFR (mGFR) data pooled from various studies, which could have used different exogenous filtration markers for the measurement of mGFR, bias calculated by the mean difference between mGFR and eGFR (mGFR-eGFR) hence a negative value would mean overestimation and a positive value mean underestimation of GFR compared to the measured GFR
Properties of the most commonly used biomarkers for measuring or estimating glomerular filtration rate
| Filtration marker | Source | Type | Filtration property |
|---|---|---|---|
| Creatinine | Endogenous | Metabolised from creatine | Freely filtered through the glomeruli |
| Secreted from the proximal tubule | |||
| Extra-renal elimination (stools/sweat) | |||
| Cystatin | Endogenous | Proteinase inhibitor | Stable plasma concentration |
| Freely filtered through glomeruli | |||
| Reabsorbed and metabolised in the proximal tubule | |||
| Inulin | Exogenous | Fructose polysaccharide | Physiologically inert |
| Freely filtered through the glomeruli | |||
| Not absorbed, secreted, synthesised or metabolised in the kidney | |||
| Stable plasma concentration | |||
| Iohexol | Exogenous | Non-ionic water soluble contrast medium | Freely filtered through glomeruli |
| Not secreted or reabsorbed in the tubules |
Comparisons of performance of cystatin C derived eGFR equations in elderly patients from different study groups
| References | Age (years) |
| mGFR method | mGFR (ml/min/1.73 m2) | eGFR equation | Bias | P30 | Best performance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fan et al. [ | 80a | 805 | Iohexol | 62 ± 17 | CKD-EPI | 1.9 | 93.8 | CAPA |
| Japanese | 4.6 | 92.8 | ||||||
| CAPA | 0.1 | 94.4 | ||||||
| Alshaer et al. [ | 80b | 394 | Iohexol | 53 (7–101) | CKD-EPI | 0.1 | 86 | – |
| Kilbride et al. [ | 80b | 234 | Iohexol | <60 | CKD-EPId | −3.4 | 91.0 | – |
| 160 | ≥60 | CKD-EPIe | 2.9 | 82.0 | – | |||
| Schaeffner et al. [ | 79a | 285 | Iohexol | 60 (16–117) | CKD-EPI | −2.05 | 89.1 | – |
CKD-EPI chronic kidney disease epidemiology collaboration, CAPA Caucasian, Asian, paediatric, and adult cohort, IQR interquartile range (precision), P percentage of eGFR within 30% of the measured GFR (accuracy), eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate
a Mean age
b Median age
c Measured GFR (mGFR) data pooled from various studies, which could have used different exogenous filtration markers for the measurement of mGFR, bias calculated by the mean difference between mGFR and eGFR (eGFR-mGFR); hence, a negative value would mean overestimation and a positive value mean underestimation of GFR compared to the measured GFR
d Normal mGFR indicates group with measured GFR of ≥60 mL/min/1.73 m2
e CKD indicates group with measured GFR <60 mL/min/1.73 m2
Comparisons of performance of eGFR equations which use both creatinine and cystatin C in elderly patients from different study groups
| References | Age (years) |
| mGFR method | mGFR (ml/min/1.73 m2) | eGFR equation | Bias | P30 | Best performance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fan et al. [ | 80a | 805 | Iohexol | 62 ± 17 | CKD-EPI | −0.6 | 96.1 | BIS2 |
| Japanese | 8.2 | 93 | ||||||
| BIS2 | 5.3 | 97.9 | ||||||
| Alshaer et al. [ | 80b | 394 | Iohexol | 53 (7–101) | BIS2 | −1.2 | 86 | |
| Kilbride et al. [ | 80b | 394 | Iohexol | 53 (7–101) | CKD-EPI | −1.2 | 86 | – |
| Schaeffner et al. [ | 79a | 285 | Iohexol | 60 (16–117) | BIS2 | −9.22 | 81.4 | |
| Lopes et al. [ | 85a | 95 | Iohexol | 55 (19–86) | BIS2 | 4.0 | 85 |
CKD-EPI Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration, CAPA Caucasian, Asian, paediatric, and adult cohort, P percentage of eGFR within 30% of the measured GFR (Accuracy), eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate
a Mean age
b Median age
c Measured GFR (mGFR) data pooled from various studies, which could have used different exogenous filtration markers for the measurement of mGFR, bias calculated by the mean difference between mGFR and eGFR (mGFR-eGFR); hence, a negative value would mean overestimation and a positive value mean underestimation of GFR compared to the measured GFR
Key points
| eGFR is influenced by several factors including age |
| eGFR equations are only validated for use in CKD, not AKI |
| 2012 KDOGI guidelines recommend the use of CKD-EPI equation to calculate eGFR instead of the four-variable MDRD equation due to better accuracy |
| Cystatin C in combination with creatinine appears to be superior in estimating GFR and needs to be considered in special circumstances |
| BIS equations appear to be the more accurate in estimating GFR in the elderly but there is not yet any recommendation for an eGFR equation specific to this age group |