重新思考肾功能:肾功能评估和慢性肾脏疾病鉴定的新方法。

IF 6.7 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Jessica Dawson, Meg Jardine
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The equation for calculating the eGFR has been updated, and Australian practitioners may be curious to know why this might concern them.</p><p>The eGFR equations were derived from multiple studies that used direct measurements of kidney function with accurate but intensive methods that are generally reserved for research, such as the clearance of the exogenous filtration markers inulin, iothalamate, or iohexol.<span><sup>1</sup></span> The Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) and the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI)<sub>2009</sub> equations included serum creatinine concentration, age, sex, and race (Black or non-Black) as variables.<span><sup>1</sup></span> A new, race-free equation was developed after concerns in the United States regarding the validity, accuracy, and implications of including a binary or non-binary race component.<span><sup>2</sup></span> In 2021 the CKD-EPI published a newly derived and validated race-free equation (CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub>), and reported that the new equations produced estimates of measured kidney function that were within the accepted 30% margin of error.<span><sup>3</sup></span> The CKD-EPI confirmed that equations based on creatinine and cystatin concentrations consistently produce more accurate estimates than equations based on creatinine alone. It also reconfirmed the clinical relevance of eGFR, reporting a strong inverse linear association with the risk of kidney failure, adverse cardiovascular events, and death. The association of lower eGFR with adverse event risk is the underlying rationale for risk-based categories in the widely used KDIGO classification of chronic kidney disease.<span><sup>4</sup></span> Using the new equation without a race coefficient is now the recommended standard.<span><sup>5</sup></span></p><p>Practitioners may wonder about the implications of the change for Australia. At the individual level, the difference is mostly a minor, one-off change in eGFR that might only be apparent in people who are being frequently monitored at the time of the equation change. At the population level, even small changes in the calculated eGFR could affect how health systems anticipate and plan for chronic kidney disease (CKD)-associated health care.</p><p>CKD has a large impact on community health and on health budgets. It affects an estimated one in ten Australian adults, and one in five Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults.<span><sup>6</sup></span> The association of CKD with adverse outcomes<span><sup>4</sup></span> is reflected by the prediction that CKD-associated death will be the fifth leading cause of years of lost life globally by 2040.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Even now, it has been estimated that CKD costs the Australian economy $9.9 billion each year.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>How the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation performs in Australia could have substantial consequences, particularly for older people, who have greater health care needs. An estimated 22% of Australians aged 65–74 years and 44% of those aged 75 years or older have biomedical signs of CKD.<span><sup>6</sup></span> As the development and validation of the CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub> and CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equations were based on American populations predominantly under 65 years of age,<span><sup>3</sup></span> it is unclear how appropriate these equations are for older people outside the United States. The CKD-EPI authors emphasised the reliance of the equation on the populations used for its derivation and validation,<span><sup>3</sup></span> underscoring the need to test its impact in other populations.</p><p>In this issue of the <i>MJA</i>, Bongetti and colleagues shed light on the possible impact of estimating GFR in healthy older Australian with the updated CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> (creatinine) equation.<span><sup>9</sup></span> The authors undertook a secondary analysis of data from the ASPREE randomised controlled trial, which investigated the effect of daily aspirin on disability-free survival in a well characterised cohort of 16 244 Australian participants aged 70 years or older with relatively preserved kidney function.<span><sup>10</sup></span> With the old standard equation (CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub>) the median eGFR was 74 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup>, and 17% of participants met the definition of CKD (eGFR below 60 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup>). With the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation, the median eGFR was about 4 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup> higher; individual changes were greatest for participants with well preserved estimated kidney function or aged 80 years or older. Overall,<sup>.</sup>20% of participants (3274 people) were classified to less advanced CKD stages with the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> than with the CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub>, meaning that the proportion labelled with clinical CKD dropped from 17% to 12%. The re-estimation made no difference to the lack of effect of daily aspirin on disability-free survival or all-cause mortality, nor on the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events or hospitalisations with heart failure. The previously reported higher risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in people with CKD was also noted using the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>The report by Bongetti and colleagues is largely reassuring. The lower prevalence among older people of meeting the definition for CKD is consistent with the original modelling for the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation.<span><sup>3</sup></span> The slightly lower CKD prevalence is likely to mean that resources and programs can be targeted to a smaller group of older people at particular risk of adverse outcomes. The clinical characteristics of the cohort indicate that the equation still characterises CKD in familiar ways, such as its being associated with higher rates of cardiovascular disease.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>The study by Bongetti and colleagues does not answer all questions. The accuracy of the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> needs to be further investigated in studies that reflect the ethnic diversity of Australia, particularly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, for whom the burden of CKD is higher than among non-Indigenous people.<span><sup>6</sup></span> Interestingly, the CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub> equation provided a reasonably accurate estimate of GFR in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people when used without a correction for race.<span><sup>11</sup></span> Some of the recent debate in the United States was foreshadowed by the authors of an Australian study who proposed that a single correction factor was unlikely to be useful in Australia, given the heterogeneity and ethnic diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.<span><sup>11</sup></span></p><p>The accuracy of the equations for Australians of Asian background requires further investigation, given both the composition of the Australian population and the anticipated growth in the incidence of kidney failure in Asia.<span><sup>12</sup></span> In Chinese<span><sup>13, 14</sup></span> and South Asian<span><sup>15</sup></span> populations, the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation yields median eGFR values median 4 to 6 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup> higher than the CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub>. 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At the population level, even small changes in the calculated eGFR could affect how health systems anticipate and plan for chronic kidney disease (CKD)-associated health care.</p><p>CKD has a large impact on community health and on health budgets. It affects an estimated one in ten Australian adults, and one in five Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults.<span><sup>6</sup></span> The association of CKD with adverse outcomes<span><sup>4</sup></span> is reflected by the prediction that CKD-associated death will be the fifth leading cause of years of lost life globally by 2040.<span><sup>7</sup></span> Even now, it has been estimated that CKD costs the Australian economy $9.9 billion each year.<span><sup>8</sup></span></p><p>How the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation performs in Australia could have substantial consequences, particularly for older people, who have greater health care needs. An estimated 22% of Australians aged 65–74 years and 44% of those aged 75 years or older have biomedical signs of CKD.<span><sup>6</sup></span> As the development and validation of the CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub> and CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equations were based on American populations predominantly under 65 years of age,<span><sup>3</sup></span> it is unclear how appropriate these equations are for older people outside the United States. The CKD-EPI authors emphasised the reliance of the equation on the populations used for its derivation and validation,<span><sup>3</sup></span> underscoring the need to test its impact in other populations.</p><p>In this issue of the <i>MJA</i>, Bongetti and colleagues shed light on the possible impact of estimating GFR in healthy older Australian with the updated CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> (creatinine) equation.<span><sup>9</sup></span> The authors undertook a secondary analysis of data from the ASPREE randomised controlled trial, which investigated the effect of daily aspirin on disability-free survival in a well characterised cohort of 16 244 Australian participants aged 70 years or older with relatively preserved kidney function.<span><sup>10</sup></span> With the old standard equation (CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub>) the median eGFR was 74 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup>, and 17% of participants met the definition of CKD (eGFR below 60 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup>). With the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation, the median eGFR was about 4 mL/min/1.73 m<sup>2</sup> higher; individual changes were greatest for participants with well preserved estimated kidney function or aged 80 years or older. Overall,<sup>.</sup>20% of participants (3274 people) were classified to less advanced CKD stages with the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> than with the CKD-EPI<sub>2009</sub>, meaning that the proportion labelled with clinical CKD dropped from 17% to 12%. The re-estimation made no difference to the lack of effect of daily aspirin on disability-free survival or all-cause mortality, nor on the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events or hospitalisations with heart failure. The previously reported higher risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in people with CKD was also noted using the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>The report by Bongetti and colleagues is largely reassuring. The lower prevalence among older people of meeting the definition for CKD is consistent with the original modelling for the CKD-EPI<sub>2021</sub> equation.<span><sup>3</sup></span> The slightly lower CKD prevalence is likely to mean that resources and programs can be targeted to a smaller group of older people at particular risk of adverse outcomes. The clinical characteristics of the cohort indicate that the equation still characterises CKD in familiar ways, such as its being associated with higher rates of cardiovascular disease.<span><sup>9</sup></span></p><p>The study by Bongetti and colleagues does not answer all questions. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在澳大利亚,每次血清肌酐病理检查结果都是常规返回,并报告估计的肾小球滤过率(eGFR)。计算eGFR的公式已经更新,澳大利亚的从业者可能很好奇为什么这可能与他们有关。eGFR方程来源于多项研究,这些研究使用精确但密集的方法直接测量肾功能,这些方法通常用于研究,例如清除外源性过滤标记物菊粉、碘甲酸酯或碘己醇肾脏疾病的饮食改变(MDRD)和慢性肾脏疾病流行病学合作(CKD-EPI)2009方程包括血清肌酐浓度、年龄、性别和种族(黑人或非黑人)作为变量1在美国,考虑到包含二元或非二元种族成分的有效性、准确性和影响后,开发了一个新的、无种族的方程2021年,CKD-EPI发布了一个新的推导和验证的无种族方程(CKD-EPI2021),并报告说,新方程产生的测量肾功能估计在可接受的30%误差范围内CKD-EPI证实,基于肌酐和胱抑素浓度的方程始终比单独基于肌酐的方程产生更准确的估计。该研究还再次证实了eGFR的临床相关性,报告了eGFR与肾衰竭、心血管不良事件和死亡风险的强烈线性负相关。低eGFR与不良事件风险的关联是广泛使用的慢性肾脏疾病KDIGO分类中基于风险分类的基本原理使用没有种族系数的新方程是现在推荐的标准。从业者可能想知道这一变化对澳大利亚的影响。在个体水平上,这种差异主要是eGFR的微小的一次性变化,可能只有在方程式变化时经常监测的人身上才会明显。在人群水平上,即使计算出的eGFR的微小变化也可能影响卫生系统对慢性肾脏疾病(CKD)相关卫生保健的预测和计划。慢性肾病对社区卫生和卫生预算有很大影响。据估计,十分之一的澳大利亚成年人、五分之一的土著居民和托雷斯海峡岛民都患有此病据预测,到2040年,CKD相关死亡将成为全球第五大死亡原因,这反映了CKD与不良后果的关联。即使是现在,据估计,CKD每年给澳大利亚经济造成99亿美元的损失。CKD-EPI2021在澳大利亚的表现可能会产生重大影响,特别是对于有更大医疗保健需求的老年人。据估计,22%的65 - 74岁的澳大利亚人和44%的75岁或以上的澳大利亚人有ckd的生物医学症状。6由于CKD-EPI2009和CKD-EPI2021方程的开发和验证是基于65岁以下的美国人群,目前尚不清楚这些方程是否适用于美国以外的老年人。CKD-EPI的作者强调了该方程对用于推导和验证的人群的依赖,3强调了在其他人群中测试其影响的必要性。在这一期的MJA中,Bongetti及其同事阐明了使用更新的CKD-EPI2021(肌酐)方程估计健康澳大利亚老年人GFR的可能影响作者对ASPREE随机对照试验的数据进行了二次分析,该试验调查了16244名年龄在70岁或以上且肾功能相对保存的澳大利亚参与者每天服用阿司匹林对无残疾生存的影响使用旧的标准公式(CKD- epi2009),中位eGFR为74 mL/min/1.73 m2, 17%的参与者符合CKD的定义(eGFR低于60 mL/min/1.73 m2)。根据CKD-EPI2021方程,eGFR中位数约为4ml /min/1.73 m2;对于肾功能保存良好或年龄在80岁以上的参与者,个体变化最大。总而言之,。与CKD- epi2009相比,20%的参与者(3274人)CKD- epi2021被归类为较不晚期的CKD阶段,这意味着标记为临床CKD的比例从17%下降到12%。每日服用阿司匹林对无残疾生存或全因死亡率没有影响,对主要不良心血管事件或因心力衰竭住院的发生率也没有影响。先前报道的CKD患者主要不良心血管事件的高风险也使用CKD- epi2021方程进行了记录。Bongetti及其同事的报告在很大程度上让人放心。 符合CKD定义的老年人患病率较低,这与CKD- epi2021方程的原始模型一致较低的CKD患病率可能意味着资源和项目可以针对更小的老年人群体,他们有特殊的不良后果风险。该队列的临床特征表明,该方程仍然以熟悉的方式表征CKD,例如与较高的心血管疾病发病率相关。Bongetti及其同事的研究并没有回答所有的问题。CKD- epi2021的准确性需要在反映澳大利亚种族多样性的研究中进一步调查,特别是土著人和托雷斯海峡岛民,他们的CKD负担高于非土著人有趣的是,在没有种族校正的情况下,CKD-EPI2009方程提供了对原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民GFR的相当准确的估计澳大利亚一项研究的作者提出,考虑到土著人和托雷斯海峡岛民的异质性和种族多样性,单一的修正因素在澳大利亚不太可能有用,这预示了美国最近的一些辩论。考虑到澳大利亚人口的组成和亚洲肾衰竭发病率的预期增长,该公式对于亚洲背景的澳大利亚人的准确性需要进一步研究。在中国13,14和南亚15人群中,CKD-EPI2021公式产生的中位数eGFR值中位数比CKD-EPI2009高4至6 mL/min/1.73 m2。然而,据报道,与测量的GFR相比,CKD-EPI2021方程表现不佳,一些研究人员试图开发特定种族背景的方程。14,15卫生保健资源的公平分配和降低卫生保健费用都需要在澳大利亚不同人口中适当识别和应对慢性肾病。Bongetti及其同事的研究结果表明,采用更新的公式可能会导致更少的老年人被归类为CKD。这是否能提高针对高危人群的资源的有效利用,还有待观察。无相关披露。外部同行评审。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Re-thinking kidney function: a new approach to kidney function estimation and the identification of chronic kidney disease

Each serum creatinine pathology test result in Australia is routinely returned with a report on the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). The equation for calculating the eGFR has been updated, and Australian practitioners may be curious to know why this might concern them.

The eGFR equations were derived from multiple studies that used direct measurements of kidney function with accurate but intensive methods that are generally reserved for research, such as the clearance of the exogenous filtration markers inulin, iothalamate, or iohexol.1 The Modification of Diet in Renal Disease (MDRD) and the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI)2009 equations included serum creatinine concentration, age, sex, and race (Black or non-Black) as variables.1 A new, race-free equation was developed after concerns in the United States regarding the validity, accuracy, and implications of including a binary or non-binary race component.2 In 2021 the CKD-EPI published a newly derived and validated race-free equation (CKD-EPI2021), and reported that the new equations produced estimates of measured kidney function that were within the accepted 30% margin of error.3 The CKD-EPI confirmed that equations based on creatinine and cystatin concentrations consistently produce more accurate estimates than equations based on creatinine alone. It also reconfirmed the clinical relevance of eGFR, reporting a strong inverse linear association with the risk of kidney failure, adverse cardiovascular events, and death. The association of lower eGFR with adverse event risk is the underlying rationale for risk-based categories in the widely used KDIGO classification of chronic kidney disease.4 Using the new equation without a race coefficient is now the recommended standard.5

Practitioners may wonder about the implications of the change for Australia. At the individual level, the difference is mostly a minor, one-off change in eGFR that might only be apparent in people who are being frequently monitored at the time of the equation change. At the population level, even small changes in the calculated eGFR could affect how health systems anticipate and plan for chronic kidney disease (CKD)-associated health care.

CKD has a large impact on community health and on health budgets. It affects an estimated one in ten Australian adults, and one in five Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander adults.6 The association of CKD with adverse outcomes4 is reflected by the prediction that CKD-associated death will be the fifth leading cause of years of lost life globally by 2040.7 Even now, it has been estimated that CKD costs the Australian economy $9.9 billion each year.8

How the CKD-EPI2021 equation performs in Australia could have substantial consequences, particularly for older people, who have greater health care needs. An estimated 22% of Australians aged 65–74 years and 44% of those aged 75 years or older have biomedical signs of CKD.6 As the development and validation of the CKD-EPI2009 and CKD-EPI2021 equations were based on American populations predominantly under 65 years of age,3 it is unclear how appropriate these equations are for older people outside the United States. The CKD-EPI authors emphasised the reliance of the equation on the populations used for its derivation and validation,3 underscoring the need to test its impact in other populations.

In this issue of the MJA, Bongetti and colleagues shed light on the possible impact of estimating GFR in healthy older Australian with the updated CKD-EPI2021 (creatinine) equation.9 The authors undertook a secondary analysis of data from the ASPREE randomised controlled trial, which investigated the effect of daily aspirin on disability-free survival in a well characterised cohort of 16 244 Australian participants aged 70 years or older with relatively preserved kidney function.10 With the old standard equation (CKD-EPI2009) the median eGFR was 74 mL/min/1.73 m2, and 17% of participants met the definition of CKD (eGFR below 60 mL/min/1.73 m2). With the CKD-EPI2021 equation, the median eGFR was about 4 mL/min/1.73 m2 higher; individual changes were greatest for participants with well preserved estimated kidney function or aged 80 years or older. Overall,.20% of participants (3274 people) were classified to less advanced CKD stages with the CKD-EPI2021 than with the CKD-EPI2009, meaning that the proportion labelled with clinical CKD dropped from 17% to 12%. The re-estimation made no difference to the lack of effect of daily aspirin on disability-free survival or all-cause mortality, nor on the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular events or hospitalisations with heart failure. The previously reported higher risk of major adverse cardiovascular events in people with CKD was also noted using the CKD-EPI2021 equation.9

The report by Bongetti and colleagues is largely reassuring. The lower prevalence among older people of meeting the definition for CKD is consistent with the original modelling for the CKD-EPI2021 equation.3 The slightly lower CKD prevalence is likely to mean that resources and programs can be targeted to a smaller group of older people at particular risk of adverse outcomes. The clinical characteristics of the cohort indicate that the equation still characterises CKD in familiar ways, such as its being associated with higher rates of cardiovascular disease.9

The study by Bongetti and colleagues does not answer all questions. The accuracy of the CKD-EPI2021 needs to be further investigated in studies that reflect the ethnic diversity of Australia, particularly Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, for whom the burden of CKD is higher than among non-Indigenous people.6 Interestingly, the CKD-EPI2009 equation provided a reasonably accurate estimate of GFR in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people when used without a correction for race.11 Some of the recent debate in the United States was foreshadowed by the authors of an Australian study who proposed that a single correction factor was unlikely to be useful in Australia, given the heterogeneity and ethnic diversity of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.11

The accuracy of the equations for Australians of Asian background requires further investigation, given both the composition of the Australian population and the anticipated growth in the incidence of kidney failure in Asia.12 In Chinese13, 14 and South Asian15 populations, the CKD-EPI2021 equation yields median eGFR values median 4 to 6 mL/min/1.73 m2 higher than the CKD-EPI2009. However, the CKD-EPI2021 equation is reported to perform poorly when compared with measured GFR, and some investigators have attempted to develop ethnic background-specific equations.14, 15

The equitable allocation of health care resources and lower health care costs each require the appropriate identification and response to CKD in the diverse Australian population. The findings of Bongetti and colleagues suggest that adopting the updated equation may result in fewer older people being classified as having CKD. Whether this improves the effective use of resources targeted to those at greatest risk remains to be seen.

No relevant disclosures.

Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
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