4.7 Article

A Unifying Approach for GFR Estimation: Recommendations of the NKF-ASN Task Force on Reassessing the Inclusion of Race in Diagnosing Kidney Disease

期刊

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
卷 32, 期 12, 页码 2994-3015

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AMER SOC NEPHROLOGY
DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2021070988

关键词

eGFR; health disparities; creatinine; ethnicity; chronic kidney disease; clinical nephrology; glomerular filtration rate; drug excretion; epidemiology and outcomes

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A Task Force developed recommendations for reassessing inclusion of race in GFR estimation in the United States. The recommendations include immediate implementation of a creatinine equation refit without the race variable and increasing the use of cystatin C, as well as encouraging research on new filtration markers and interventions to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities.
Significance Statement A Task Force from the National Kidney Foundation and American Society of Nephrology developed recommendations for reassessing inclusion of race in the estimation of GFR in the United States. The Task Force recommends immediate implementation of the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration creatinine equation refit without the race variable in all laboratories because the calculation does not include race, it included diversity in its development, its potential adverse consequences do not disproportionately affect any one group, and it is immediately available to all laboratories. A second recommendation calls for national efforts to facilitate increased, routine, and timely use of cystatin C, especially to confirm eGFR in adults for clinical decision making. A third recommendation encourages research on GFR estimation with new endogenous filtration markers and interventions to eliminate racial and ethnic disparities. Background In response to a national call for re-evaluation of the use of race in clinical algorithms, the National Kidney Foundation (NKF) and the American Society of Nephrology (ASN) established a Task Force to reassess inclusion of race in the estimation of GFR in the United States and its implications for diagnosis and management of patients with, or at risk for, kidney diseases. Process & Deliberations The Task Force organized its activities over 10 months in phases to (1) clarify the problem and evidence regarding eGFR equations in the United States (described previously in an interim report), and, in this final report, (2) evaluate approaches to address use of race in GFR estimation, and (3) provide recommendations. We identified 26 approaches for the estimation of GFR that did or did not consider race and narrowed our focus, by consensus, to five of those approaches. We holistically evaluated each approach considering six attributes: assay availability and standardization; implementation; population diversity in equation development; performance compared with measured GFR; consequences to clinical care, population tracking, and research; and patient centeredness. To arrive at a unifying approach to estimate GFR, we integrated information and evidence from many sources in assessing strengths and weaknesses in attributes for each approach, recognizing the number of Black and non-Black adults affected. Recommendations (1) For US adults (>85% of whom have normal kidney function), we recommend immediate implementation of the CKD-EPI creatinine equation refit without the race variable in all laboratories in the United States because it does not include race in the calculation and reporting, included diversity in its development, is immediately available to all laboratories in the United States, and has acceptable performance characteristics and potential consequences that do not disproportionately affect any one group of individuals. (2) We recommend national efforts to facilitate increased, routine, and timely use of cystatin C, especially to confirm eGFR in adults who are at risk for or have CKD, because combining filtration markers (creatinine and cystatin C) is more accurate and would support better clinical decisions than either marker alone. If ongoing evidence supports acceptable performance, the CKD-EPI eGFR?cystatin C (eGFRcys) and eGFR creatinine?cystatin C (eGFRcr-cys_R) refit without the race variables should be adopted to provide another first-line test, in addition to confirmatory testing. (3) Research on GFR estimation with new endogenous filtration markers and on interventions to eliminate race and ethnic disparities should be encouraged and funded. An investment in science is needed for newer approaches that generate accurate, unbiased, and precise GFR measurement and estimation without the inclusion of race, and that promote health equity and do not generate disparate care. Implementation This unified approach, without specification of race, should be adopted across the United States. High-priority and multistakeholder efforts should implement this solution.

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