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Controversies in Nephrology |
David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, and Oxford Kidney Unit, Oxford, United Kingdom
Correspondence: Dr. Richard J. Glassock, 8 Bethany, Laguna Niguel, CA 92677. Phone: 949-388-8885; Fax: 949-388-8882; E-mail: Glassock{at}cox.net
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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In patients with unequivocal kidney disease, the description of renal function as an estimate of GFR is undoubtedly more informative than the serum creatinine concentration alone. However, the application of such estimates to the epidemiologic evaluation of the overall CKD burden in the community-at-large (containing large numbers of healthy persons) and the utility of the derived values of eGFR as screening tools for the identification of individuals with CKD have not yet been prospectively validated. Routine reporting of eGFR calculated from a plasma creatinine concentration measured as part of clinical chemistry testing will, in our view, often be "automatically" translated into a K/DOQI-CKD stage and thereby function as a form of "covert" universal screening for CKD. The GFR estimating formulas were not originally developed with this purpose in mind.
The implications of widespread (global) use of an eGFR-based system of classification of a "disease" are enormous, not only for society but also for the individual. Although the NKF (Kidney Disease Outcomes Quality Initiative [KDOQI]) classification system is not wholly based on eGFR, it is the defining component (1). Proteinuria (both "micro-albuminuria" and "macro-albuminuria") and other manifestation of "kidney damage" are also used to define CKD stage 1 and 2, but classifications of CKD stages 3, 4, and 5 are assessed by eGFR alone (1). Because these latter categories constitute at least 60% of the total putative CKD population, the use of eGFR has a crucial role in determining what is now called "CKD," in this, the post-K/DOQI era. This commentary, intended as a Mistral (a cold northerly wind that blows down the Rhone valley and Southern France into the Mediterranean sea), will therefore focus on eGFR and its implications, particularly in relationship to screening for the detection of CKD in the population as a whole.
| eGFR Is Unreliable in Defining CKD |
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Questions have also been raised as to whether using "microalbuminuria" (elevated albumin excretion above the "normal" range but below the levels of usual detection by qualitative means) is a true reflection of "kidney disease" but is rather a marker of a generalized disturbance in endothelial function ("chronic vascular disease") (7). The major flaw of using eGFR to categorize CKD is most obvious for CKD stage 3. The NKF/K/DOQI staging system contains the unfortunate error of using an absolute threshold of eGFR
30/min/1.73 m2 (as assessed by the MDRD formula) for defining CKD stage 3, and does not require any corroborating evidence of "kidney damage" (such as abnormal albuminuria) (1). To use a binary approach to diagnosis is bound to cause trouble. GFR can be estimated but diagnosis cannot. Proper treatment requires precision in diagnosis. As we have pointed out elsewhere, these values of eGFR overlap extensively with the normal age- and gender-adjusted values for eGFR (8). The consequence of this flaw is very significant in that it categorizes a substantial fraction of otherwise normal, healthy older individuals (over age 65 yr) as having CKD stage 3 when they do not have any clinically relevant abnormality. This distortion is most marked in females and is the probable explanation for the excess of females with CKD stage 3 compared with an overabundance of males with newly treated end-stage renal disease (ESRD) (CKD stage 5) (9). This error will also lead to a categorization of a substantial number of normal living kidney donors as having CKD stage 3 after donation (10). The use of an absolute threshold for defining CKD also virtually guarantees that CKD will increase in prevalence as population demographics change with time. Thus, CKD prevalence will track with age and with eGFR. A simple adjustment of the threshold for defining CKD stage 3 by use of percentiles of eGFR for age and gender derived from healthy cohorts would eliminate this flaw and reduce the estimated prevalence of CKD in the community to more credible levels (5,8). The addition of abnormal albuminuria as a requirement for defining CKD stage 3 would reduce the estimates of prevalence of CKD even further (11). We postulate that if these adjustments were made in the definition of what constitutes "authentic" CKD, that the overall prevalence rate of stage 3 CKD in the population-at-large would be shown to have remained relatively constant over the past several decades (at least in the United States), as we have argued elsewhere (8). Another source of error, often neglected in population-wide surveys, is that a single serum creatinine concentration is unreliable in assessing chronicity of disease. The original definition of CKD included a time-component: namely, the persistence of a reduced GFR or "kidney damage" for at least 3 mo (1). This component was incorporated into the definition to exclude random variation of and/or the development of transient declines in eGFR. Such repeated measurements are not usually practical in population-wide surveys. The use of a single eGFR measurement to categorize CKD stage 3 can result in a "false positive" assignment to CKD stage 3 in as many as 30% of subjects (12).
It is worth reemphasizing that the MDRD formula was derived from a relatively small sample of subjects with a prior diagnosis of CKD, and with overt kidney damage. However, we still have only incomplete information as to whether the same formula can be applied to diverse populations with varying body habitus, ancestry, prevailing diet, or geography (6). Early findings suggest that modifications of the original MDRD formula will be required in these populations (13). Correction of eGFR to a standard body surface area (BSA), explicitly included in the MDRD formula, may also give rise to errors when the individual are very obese or very lean (14)
Widespread and uncritical use of the current K/DOQI advocated MDRD formula without modifications can, and likely will, lead to erroneous estimates of the population-wide prevalence of CKD. The issue of "calibration" of serum creatinine measurements to a single "global gold-standard" has been vigorously discussed elsewhere (15). Such calibration is needed to compare the individual results for eGFR with those published using the MDRD formula, particularly when the eGFR is >60 ml/min/1.73 m2 (CKD stage 1 and 2), but it is less important for CKD stages 3, 4, and 5 or for serial measurements in individual patients.
We conclude that the use of eGFR alone for classifying CKD is not justified and should not be applied globally (8). We do believe that eGFR, as determined by the MDRD equation, is sufficiently accurate for ordinary clinical purposes, such as following the changes of renal function over time in an individual patient with overt kidney disease. However, we do not concur with mandatory (obligated by regulation) laboratory reporting of eGFR (as presently exist in the United Kingdom and in several states in the USA) as calculated by the current MDRD formula from a single serum creatinine concentration combined with subsequent automatic assignment of a CKD stage without due consideration of expected age- and gender-associated changes of eGFR and the presence of evidence of "kidney damage." The argument that such calculated values of eGFR may help physicians determine drug-dosing regimens (avoiding toxicity and optimizing the therapeutic levels when drugs eliminated by GFR are used) has some merit, but it is not yet agreed which formula is best for this purpose (16). Furthermore, using eGFR values adjusted to standard BSA area can introduce drug dosing errors in the very obese and very lean (4). The relationship of BSA to total body water (TBW) is not constant over all ages, genders, and ancestry (17). The value for TBW may be an important parameter in determining drug dosage. Elderly subjects may have a reduction in TBW (17). If the absolute value for eGFR is a more important parameter for determining drug dosage, then adjustment for BSA may give rise to errors in the obese and the lean, independent of age (14,16). Absolute true GFR values will be underestimated in the obese and overestimated in the very lean. These errors can give rise to problems of drug dosing in the elderly as well. For example, imagine two individuals each 60 yr of age with identical serum creatinine levels of 1.35 mg/dl. One of the individuals weighs 100 kg and is 1.9 m tall (BSA = 2.28 m2) and the other weighs 70 kg and is 1.6 m tall (BSA = 1.73 m2). The calculated eGFRs (MDRD) for both of these individuals are identical at 57 ml/min/1.73 m2, and they both therefore have stage 3 CKD, according to K/DOQI. However, the uncorrected GFR for the heavier individual is actually 75 ml/min and is 57 ml/min for the lighter individual. Which of the two values for eGFR is the more appropriate one for selecting a dose of a potentially toxic agent depending on GFR for its elimination?
| eGFR Should Not Be Used in Isolation as a Means for Screening Populations for CKD |
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Finally, the cost-effectiveness of screening needs to be estimated and both the benefits and harms clearly articulated (18). Current evidence suggests that CKD may meet criteria for justifying screening (18). What is less certain is what screening methods should be used and what populations should be screened. It is widely agreed that additional studies of the "benefits, risks and costs of screening for CKD, including randomized, controlled trials, are needed in the general (US) population before final recommendations can be made" (18). Universal screening for CKD based on eGFR alone cannot be recommended, but targeted screening based on the existence of hypertension, diabetes, or a family history of CKD and proteinuria may be effective (18,19). The programs described by Melamed, Bauer, and Hostetter in their Editorial and the Kidney Early Evaluation Program (KEEP) of the National Kidney Foundation (20) are good examples of these efforts.
Thus, on the basis of the available evidence, we believe, as do others (19), that universal screening for CKD using eGFR in isolation would be expensive, unproductive, and potentially harmful. The number of individuals who need to be screened to identify a single individual in whom a reasonably useful intervention could be offered is likely to be extremely large. Both the "false positive" and "false negative" rates would be dauntingly high using the current classification CKD schema (21).
We have argued earlier that a high percentage of older individuals, many of whom are females, will have an eGFR less than 60 ml/min/1.73 m2. Most of these individuals will not have overt proteinuria or other evidence of kidney damage, and the eGFR may fall within the expected range of normal for the age and gender of the individual. For example, in the most recent iteration of the sequential population-based examinations conducted in the United States (NHANES 1999–2004) (22), 76% of the participants with an eGFR of 30 to 59 ml/min/1.73 m2 (CKD stage 3) did not have abnormal proteinuria and only 6% had overt macroalbuminuria. Almost 55% of the participants classified as CKD stage 3 were over 60 yr of age and 37% were over the age of 70 yr. Screening for CKD, based on eGFR alone, will identify a largely older population (mostly female), many of whom will not have any corroborative evidence of "kidney disease." Thus, it can be assumed that eGFR-based screening will generate a large number of "false positives," using current criteria, leading to unnecessary investigations, referrals, cost, and anxiety. In a long-term (25 yr follow-up) longitudinal study of men with a high risk of cardiovascular disease (the MRFIT study) (23), it was noted that an eGFR of <60 ml/min/1.73 m2 in the absence of "dipstick positive" proteinuria had a positive predictive value of only 5.6% for the future development of treated ESRD. The addition of
1+ proteinuria to an eGFR of <60 ml/min/1.73 m2 improved the positive predictive value to about 26%. The majority of patients who are destined to develop treated ESRD would not be detected by a screening program based on eGFR alone ("false negatives"). The combination of an eGFR and urinary protein (or albumin) excretion improves both the "false positive" and "false negative" rates, but still the positive predictive value is only 1 of 4 and the negative predictive value is about 8 of 10. These parameters, focused primarily on the outcome of treated ESRD, are insufficient to warrant an investment in universal eGFR screening.
Targeted screening is quite another matter. On this point, we agree with Melamed, Bauer, and Hostetter. Enrichment of the a priori probability of finding an individual with a progressive form of renal disease will enhance the positive predictive value and minimize the negative predictive value of the screening test. Thus, targeted eGFR-based or proteinuria screening of individuals with a history of diabetes, hypertension, or a family history of renal disease may prove to be of value (18,20,24). However, screening for proteinuria alone may be easier, cheaper, and more reliable in this subset of individuals (25). It is still unknown whether screening for microalbuminuria will be better than screening for macroalbuminuria in terms of overall secondary prevention of progressive renal disease (26). Accurate, reliable, inexpensive, and rapid point-of-service methods or devices that measure low, but abnormal levels of albumin excretion are now available and studies are in progress to better define their value in the overall screening paradigm (27). Because targeted screening involves identification of individuals with at least two modifiable risk factors, diabetes and hypertension, one can logically ask whether the addition of another screening maneuver (e.g., eGFR) will contribute materially to the prevention of disease, over and above the management of the already identified risk factors. We are not aware of any convincing evidence that treatment of subjects with a "low" eGFR (but one that is normal for age and gender) in the absence of proteinuria or hypertension has any effect on the rate of change of GFR.
| The Benefit of eGFR Screening on Identifying Cardiovascular Risk Is Unproven |
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Can the high risk of CV events in those with a reduced eGFR be used as a rationale for universal eGFR-based screening? We think not, although this proposal has not yet been tested in a prospective manner. The prevalence of an eGFR in the range where CV event rates increase greatly (HR >3.0), approximately <45 ml/min/1.73 m2, is quite low (about 2%) in the general population (although it would be expected to be higher populations enriched for diabetes and/or hypertension) (20) Thus, screening of 100 subjects for an "abnormal" eGFR would yield about 2 individuals at risk, and the great majority of these could already be identified by application of the conventional Framingham Risk Scoring. The anticipated marginal benefit of adding eGFR <45 ml/min/1.73 m2 alone, in the absence of concomitant proteinuria, is, in our opinion, insufficient to warrant universal or even targeted screening for eGFR alone. The use of "statins" to mitigate the occurrence of fatal and nonfatal CV events in subjects with CKD (eGFR <60 ml/min/1.73 m2) has recently been examined in a large meta-analysis by Strippoli et al. (29). Although such therapy reduces lipid levels and CV endpoints in CKD, irregardless of stage, no benefits accrue for all-cause mortality. A role for "statins" in the primary prevention of CVD in CKD remains unproven. At the present time, a reduction in GFR alone cannot be used as an indication for "statin" therapy for prevention of CV events or for slowing the rate of progression of CKD (30). The indications for the use of "statins" in CKD are "the same as for people with normal kidney function" (30).
In sum, we do not doubt that progressive CKD is a contributor to the risk of CV events and premature death. This seems to be a well-established fact. However, we argue that the magnitude of the effect of a reduced eGFR alone on CVD, particularly in the range of 45 to 59 ml/min/1.73 m2, which is within the normal range for many elderly subjects, has been greatly overemphasized. Because of the low frequency of eGFR <45 ml/min/1.73 m2 in the general population, we doubt that screening for eGFR in this population will be of much value, over and above conventional risk-stratification approaches, such as the Framingham Risk Score. Adjustments of the weights given to the parameters included in this scoring system for patients with reduced eGFR may improve its performance as a predictor of CV risk (31). The poor performance of eGFR alone as a predictor of future progression of CKD stages 1 to 3 to treated ESRD (CKD stage 5D) further weakens support for universal eGFR-based screening, but the performance characteristics of such screening might be enhanced by a more targeted and multiphasic approach. A great deal more research is needed in this area to establish the proper role of eGFR screening with or without concomitant proteinuria (microalbuminuria or macroalbuminuria) screening. In our opinion, until the results of this research are available, public health authorities, national governments, scientific societies, and voluntary health agencies should resist the temptation to engage in or endorse massive, population-wide screening based on eGFR alone.
| Conclusions |
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It is time for the storm to abate and for a gentle wind of change, carrying hard-earned facts, to clear the air. The clinical tool of eGFR is here to stay, but the way it should be used in clinical practice needs to be better defined. Epidemiologists too should handle eGFR with care.
| Disclosures |
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| Footnotes |
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| References |
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