| Literature DB >> 34267430 |
Brian Mark Churchill1, Pallavi Patri2,3.
Abstract
In advanced Chronic Kidney Disease, patients require renal replacement therapy (dialysis or transplantation) for clearance of toxins, electrolyte and acid-base balance and removal of excess fluid. Dialysis adequacy should be taken into consideration in the adjustment of the dialysis prescription. Kt/Vurea is one method of measuring dialysis adequacy that is commonly used in clinical practice. Different formulae for calculating Kt/V are available. The appropriate Kt/V formula to be used depends on the clinical scenario, as well as parameters such as gender and size of patient, frequency of dialysis, mode of dialysis (ie hemodialysis vs, peritoneal dialysis), inter-dialysis weight gain, clinical symptoms, complications (fluid overload, hyperkalemia, intolerance to dialysis, etc), and residual kidney function. Nutrition parameters including serum protein and albumin levels, vitamin B12 and β2-microglobulin levels should be factored into the assessment of dialysis adequacy. In this review, we have described how Kt/Vurea is calculated in hemodialysis and peritoneal dialysis with examples. We reviewed the available literature by searching for papers related to calculating Kt/Vurea, single pool Kt/V, double pool Kt/V, weekly Kt/V, standard Kt/V, surface area normalized Kt/V, and various equations commonly practiced in clinical practice. We found several original articles, some review articles along with detailed information from manufacturers of different dialyzers published on their websites or as package inserts. Understanding the different equations available for calculating Kt/Vurea and the application of these results in the clinical setting is important for refining patient care and for designing clinical studies. Copyright:Entities:
Keywords: Dialysis adequacy; Kt/V; spKt/V; standard Kt/V; surface area normalized Kt/V
Year: 2021 PMID: 34267430 PMCID: PMC8240937 DOI: 10.4103/ijn.IJN_245_19
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian J Nephrol ISSN: 0971-4065
Example- calculating residual kidney function
| Problem: A 46-year-old female patient with plasma BUN 74 (average of post dialysis and pre-dialysis BUN described above) and 24-h urine output of 400 ml, urine BUN 350 mg/dl. Height is 165 cm, and weight 54 Kg. Calculate her residual kidney function (Krt/V). |
| Solution: |
| Step 1: Calculate urea clearance or BUN clearance (urea clearance and BUN clearance is equal) |
| BUN clearance=BUNurine x Vurine (in ml/minute)/BUNplasma |
| BUNurine=350 mg/dl |
| BUNplasma=74 mg/dl |
| Vurine in ml/minute=400 ml/(24 x 60) = 400/1440 ml/min |
| BUN clearance = (350/74) x (400/1440) = 1.314 ml/min |
| Step 2: Calculate Krt/V |
| Kr (L/week) = Urea clearance (ml/min) X 10.08 |
| Kr=1.314 x 10.08 |
| Kr=13.245 L/week |
| V = -2.097 + (0.2466 X Weight in Kg) + (0.1069 X Height in cm) |
| = - 2.097 + (0.2466 x 54) + (0.1069 x 165) |
| =-2.097+13.3164+17.6385=28.8579 L=approximately 28.86 L |
| Krt/V=13.245 x 1/28.86=0.4589 |
Figure 1Understanding single pool Kt/V
Example- calculating spKt/V when dialysis sessions are more than 3 times per week
| Problem: A 38-year old female is receiving hemodialysis 6 hours per day, 5 times a week. The dialysis days are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Calculate spKt/V from the samples taken on Friday. Post dialysis blood urea (from sample taken on Thursday) is 18 mg/dl. Pre-dialysis blood urea (from sample taken on Friday) is 52 mg/dl. Weight loss is 1 L. Her weight is 57 Kg and height 165 cm. |
| Solution: |
| We will use equation 2 (given above) for calculating spKt/V, as hemodialysis frequency is high (5 times per week). |
| Equation 2: spKt/V = - ln (R - GFAC x T) + (4-3.5R) x 0.55 x Weight loss/V |
| Step 1: Here, PIDI is 1 day (Thursday to Friday). |
| G-Factor (GFAC) is 0.0175+0.001=0.0185 [from |
| Step 2: Calculating ‘V’ by Watson’s formula for women: |
| V = -2.097 + (0.2466 X Weight in Kg) + (0.1069 X Height in cm) |
| = -2.097 + (0.2466 X 57) + (0.1069 X 165) |
| = -2.097+14.0562+17.6385=29.5977 L |
| Step 3: Calculating R |
| R = post-dialysis blood urea/pre-dialysis blood urea=18/52=0.3462 |
| Using these values in equation 2: |
| Equation 2: spKt/V = - ln (R - GFAC x T) + (4-3.5R) x 0.55 x Weight loss/V |
| spKt/V = -In (0.3462-0.0185 x 6) + (4-3.5 x 0.3462) x 0.55 x (1/29.5977) |
| = - ln (0.3462-0.111) + (4-1.2117) x 0.55 x 0.0338 |
| =-ln 0.2352+2.7883 x 0.0186 |
| =-ln 0.2352+0.052 |
| Using Ln calculator available on Rapid Tables (link provided in appendix): |
| = - (-1.4473) + 0.052=1.4473+0.052=1.4993 |
GFAC (G-Factor) Value
| Dialysis sessions per week | Preceding Inter-Dialysis Interval (PIDI) in days | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
| 2 | 0.0055 | 0.0045 | ||
| 3 | 0.008 | 0.006 | ||
| 4 | 0.0155 | 0.009 | ||
| 5* | 0.0175 | 0.0095 | ||
| 6* | 0.0175 | 0.0095 | ||
| 7* | 0.0175 | 0.0175 | ||
*If dialysis session is more than 300 min, add 0.001 to GFAC value given above. Reproduced with permission from John T. Daugirdas. Reference: Daugirdas J.T, et al. Improved equation for estimating single-pool Kt/V at higher dialysis frequencies. Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. August 2013;28 (8):2156-2160
KoA (urea mass transfer-area coefficient) of different dialyzers[47484950]
| Manufacturer | Brand of dialyzer | KoA for urea |
|---|---|---|
| Baxter | Revaclear 300 | 1186 |
| Baxter | Revaclear 400 | 1438 |
| Frasenius | Optiflux F160NR | 1064 |
| Frasenius | Optiflux F180NR | 1239 |
| Baxter | Polyflux 6H (for pediatric application) | 465 |
| Asahi Kasei Medical Co., Ltd. | Rexeed-13 L | 888 |
| Asahi Kasei Medical Co., Ltd. | Rexeed-15 L | 1045 |
| Asahi Kasei Medical Co., Ltd. | Rexeed-18 L | 1145 |
| Asahi Kasei Medical Co., Ltd. | Rexeed-21 L | 1321 |
Urea clearance achieved from different dialyzers at different flow rates[29,47,51]
| Manufacturer | Brand of Dialyzer | Membrane Material | Membrane Surface Area (m2) | K (urea) in ml/min when QB is 200 ml/min, and QD is 500 ml/min | K (urea) in ml/min when QB is 400 ml/min, and QD is 500 ml/min |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baxter | Revaclear 300 | PAES/PVP | 1.4 | 196 | 323 |
| Baxter | Revaclear 400 | PAES/PVP | 1.8 | 198 | 338 |
| Fresenius | Hemoflow F6 | Fresenius Polysulfone® polymer | 1.3 | 171 | 252 |
| Fresenius | Hemoflow F8 | Fresenius Polysulfone® polymer | 1.8 | 177 | 280 |
| Fresenius | Optiflux F180A; F180B | Fresenius Polysulfone® polymer | 1.8 | 194 | 314 |
| Fresenius | Optiflux F200A, F200B | Fresenius Polysulfone® polymer | 2.0 | 194 | 320 |
QB is blood flow rate, QD is dialysate flow rate, K is clearance, PAES is Polyarylethersulfone, PVP is Polyvinylpyrrolidone
Figure 2Understanding the concept of double pool Kt/V or eKt/V
Example- calculating stdKt/V
| Problem: Let us take the same patient as described in box 2 for calculating stdKt/V. Recalling the problem from box three: a 38-year old female is receiving hemodialysis 6 hours per day, 5 times a week. The dialysis days are Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Calculate spKt/V from the samples taken on Saturday. Post dialysis blood urea (from sample taken on Friday) is 18 mg/dl. Pre-dialysis blood urea (from sample taken on Saturday) is 52 mg/dl. Weight loss is 1 L. Her weight is 57 Kg and height 165 cm. Additional information: Vascular access is AV Fistula. Weekly ultrafiltration volume is 5400 ml. Residual kidney function (urea clearance, Kru) is 1.4 ml/min. |
| Solution: We will follow the steps as given below. |
| Step1: calculate single pool Kt/V: spKt/V has already been calculated for this patient in box 3. It is 1.4993 |
| Step 2: calculate eKt/V. |
| Using Tattersall equation: eKt/V=spKt/V x T/(T+C) |
| =1.4993x [(6 x 60)/[(6 x 60) + 35] |
| =1.4993x [360/(360+35)] |
| =1.4993x 360/395=1.3665 |
| Step 3: calculate fixed volume model std Kt/V as follows: |
| As mentioned earlier, ‘e’ is 2.71828 (Euler’s number). |
| [We will use scientific calculator to calculate the value of e-1.3665 or 2.71828-1.3665] |
| e-1.3665 or 2.71828-1.3665=0.255 |
| Putting this value in the equation above, we get: |
| =28 (1-0.255)/[(1-0.255)/1.3665] + 4.6=28 x 0.745/[(0.745/1.3665) + 4.6] |
| =20.86/(0.5452+4.6) |
| =20.86/5.1452=4.0543 |
| Step 4: calculate variable volume model stdKt/V by following equation: |
| S=4.0543; F=5; Uf=5400 ml; Kru=1.4 ml/min; spKt/V=1.4993; V calculated by Watson’s equation=29597.7 ml (already calculated in box 3). |
| =[(4.0543/(1-0.027)] + [ 1.4 x {(0.974/3.1193) +0.4} x 0.34056 |
| =(4.0543/0.973) + [1.4 x (0.3122+0.4) x 0.34056=4.1668 + (1.4 x 0.7122 x 0.34056) |
| =4.1668+0.3396=4.5064 |
| StdKt/V is 4.5064 |
Example- calculate total weekly Kt/V in a patient receiving CAPD
| A 54-year old man is on CAPD for 2 years. He is on 3 exchanges per day with night time dwell. His weight is 65 Kg and height 168 cm. 24-hour peritoneal dialysate drain volume is 10 L, pooled dialysate urea is 42 mg/dL, and plasma urea is 48 mg/dl. Calculate his Kt/V peritoneal dialysis. If his 24-hour urine output is 450 ml, and urine urea concentration is 550 mg/dL, then calculate his residual kidney function, and total weekly Kt/V. Is he receiving adequate CAPD based on your result? |
| Answer: |
| Step 1: Calculating daily peritoneal urea clearance or Kt |
| Kt in Liters = (Durea/Purea) x VD (measured in Liters) |
| =(42/48) x 10=0.875 x 10=8.75 L |
| Step 2: Calculating V (volume of distribution of urea, that is total body water, by Watson Equation) |
| Watson: Male TBW or Volume of distribution of urea in Liters=2.447 - (0.09156 x age) + (0.1074 x height) + (0.3362 x weight) |
| = 2.447 - (0.09156 x 54) + (0.1074 x 168) + (0.3362 x 65) |
| =2.447-4.9442+18.0432+21.853=37.399 L |
| Step 3: Calculating daily peritoneal dialysis achieved (Kt/Vurea) |
| =8.75/37.399=0.234 |
| Weekly peritoneal dialysis=daily peritoneal dialysis x 7=0.234 x 7=1.638 |
| Step 4: Calculating residual kidney function Krt/V: |
| Calculate Kr, t, and V (Kr is urea clearance per week, t is time=1 week, and V is volume measured as total body water). |
| Kr is calculated in liters per week so we need to convert urea clearance obtained above from ml/min to liters/week. |
| Kr (L/week)= Urea clearance (ml/min) X [60 X 24 X 7/1000] = Urea clearance (ml/min) X 10.08 |
| V (total body water or volume of distribution of urea) is already calculated above (37.399L) |
| Urine volume in 24 hours is 450 ml. |
| Urine volume per minute=450/(24 x 60) = 450/1440=0.3125 ml/min |
| Urea clearance=Ureaurine X Vurine (in ml/min)/Ureaplasma=550 x 0.3125/48=3.5807 ml/min |
| Kr in Liters/week=urea clearance (ml/min) x 10.08=3.5807 x 10.08=36.0935 |
| Krt/V = (36.0935 x 1)/37.399=0.9651 |
| Step 5: Total Kt/V (Peritoneal dialysis+Residual kidney function) = Kt/V peritoneal + Krt/V=1.638+0.9651=2.6031 |
| Based on this result (total Kt/V=2.6031), this patient is receiving adequate peritoneal dialysis [minimum Kt/V urea should be more than 1.7 as per guidelines]. |