4.6 Review

Assessment of kidney function: clinical indications for measured GFR

Journal

CLINICAL KIDNEY JOURNAL
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages 1861-1870

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ckj/sfab042

Keywords

biomarker; chronic kidney disease; clinical indications; creatinine; cystatin C; kidney function; measured glomerular filtration rate

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG)
  2. Open Access Publication Fund of Charite' -Universitatsmedizin Berlin

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The article discusses the limitations of estimating glomerular filtration rate (GFR) using serum creatinine and proposes possible solutions such as using cystatin C or an exogenous marker for direct measurement. Various clinical scenarios where creatinine-based GFR estimation may be invalid are highlighted, emphasizing the importance of personalized medicine and the need for standardized GFR procedures.
In the vast majority of cases, glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is estimated using serum creatinine, which is highly influenced by age, sex, muscle mass, body composition, severe chronic illness and many other factors. This often leads to misclassification of patients or potentially puts patients at risk for inappropriate clinical decisions. Possible solutions are the use of cystatin C as an alternative endogenous marker or performing direct measurement of GFR using an exogenous marker such as iohexol. The purpose of this review is to highlight clinical scenarios and conditions such as extreme body composition, Black race, disagreement between creatinine- and cystatin C-based estimated GFR (eGFR), drug dosing, liver cirrhosis, advanced chronic kidney disease and the transition to kidney replacement therapy, non-kidney solid organ transplant recipients and living kidney donors where creatinine-based GFR estimation may be invalid. In contrast to the majority of literature on measured GFR (mGFR), this review does not include aspects of mGFR for research or public health settings but aims to reach practicing clinicians and raise their understanding of the substantial limitations of creatinine. While including cystatin C as a renal biomarker in GFR estimating equations has been shown to increase the accuracy of the GFR estimate, there are also limitations to eGFR based on cystatin C alone or the combination of creatinine and cystatin C in the clinical scenarios described above that can be overcome by measuring GFR with an exogenous marker. We acknowledge that mGFR is not readily available in many centres but hope that this review will highlight and promote the expansion of kidney function diagnostics using standardized mGFR procedures as an important milestone towards more accurate and personalized medicine.

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