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Performance of creatinine-based equations to estimate glomerular filtration rate with a methodology adapted to the context of drug dosage adjustment

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24518
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.15132
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Accepted manuscript version (PDF)
Date
2021-10-28
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Author
Delanaye, Pierre; Björk, Jonas; Courbebaisse, Marie; Couzi, Lionel; Ebert, Natalie; Eriksen, Bjørn Odvar; Dalton, R. Neil; Dubourg, Laurence; Melsom, Toralf; Nyman, Ulf
Abstract

Aim: The Cockcroft-Gault (CG) creatinine-based equation is still used to estimate glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) for drug dosage adjustment. Incorrect eGFR may lead to hazardous over- or underdosing.

Methods: In a cross-sectional analysis, CG was validated against measured GFR (mGFR) in 14 804 participants and compared with the Modification-of-Diet-in-Renal-Diseases (MDRD), Chronic-Kidney-Disease-Epidemiology (CKD-EPI), Lund-Malmö-Revised (LMR) and European-Kidney-Function-Consortium (EKFC) equations. Validation focused on bias, imprecision and accuracy (percentage of estimates within ±30% of mGFR, P30), overall and stratified for mGFR, age and body mass index at mGFR <60 mL/min, as well as classification in mGFR stages.

Results: The CG equation performed worse than the other equations, overall and in mGFR, age and BMI subgroups in terms of bias (systematic overestimation), imprecision and accuracy except for patients ≥65 years where bias and P30 were similar to MDRD and CKD-EPI, but worse than LMR and EKFC. In subjects with mGFR <60 mL/min and at BMI 18.5-25 kg/m2, all equations performed similarly, and for BMI < 18.5 kg/m2 CG and LMR had the best results though all equations had poor P30-accuracy. At BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 the bias of the CG increased with increasing BMI (+17.2 mL/min at BMI ≥ 40 kg/m2). The four more recent equations also classified mGFR stages better than CG.

Conclusions: The CG equation showed poor ability to estimate GFR overall and in analyses stratified for mGFR, age and BMI. CG was inferior to correctly classify the patients in the mGFR staging compared to more recent creatinine-based equations.

Description
This is the peer reviewed version of the following article: Delanaye, P., Björk, J., Courbebaisse, M., Couzi, L., Ebert, N., Eriksen, B.O., .... Nyman, U. (2021). Performance of creatinine-based equations to estimate glomerular filtration rate with a methodology adapted to the context of drug dosage adjustment. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology, which has been published in final form at https://doi.org/10.1111/bcp.15132. This article may be used for non-commercial purposes in accordance with Wiley Terms and Conditions for Use of Self-Archived Versions. This article may not be enhanced, enriched or otherwise transformed into a derivative work, without express permission from Wiley or by statutory rights under applicable legislation. Copyright notices must not be removed, obscured or modified. The article must be linked to Wiley’s version of record on Wiley Online Library and any embedding, framing or otherwise making available the article or pages thereof by third parties from platforms, services and websites other than Wiley Online Library must be prohibited.
Publisher
Wiley
Citation
Delanaye, P., Björk, J., Courbebaisse, M., Couzi, L., Ebert, N., Eriksen, B.O., .... Nyman, U. (2021). Performance of creatinine-based equations to estimate glomerular filtration rate with a methodology adapted to the context of drug dosage adjustment. British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.
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