Creatinine measurements often yield false estimates of progression in chronic renal failure

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Abstract

In 9 of 22 observation periods (lasting an average of 15 months) in 17 patients with moderate to severe chronic renal failure (GFR 4 to 23 ml/min), rates of progression as estimated from the linear regression on time of 24-hour creatinine clearance (b1) differed significantly from rates of progession as estimated from the regression on time of urinary clearance of 99mTc-DTPA (b2), during all or part of the period of observation. b1 exceeded b2 in four cases and was less than b2 in the other five. Thus there were gradual changes in the fractional tubular secretion of creatinine in individual patients, in both directions. Owing to these changes, measurements of creatinine clearance gave erroneous impressions of the rate of existence of progression during all or a portion of the period of observation in nearly half of these patients. In the 22 studies as a group, using the entire periods of observation, b1 indicated significantly more rapid progression (by 0.18 ± 0.06 ml/min/month, P < 0.01) than did b2, and had a significantly greater variance. Measurements of progression based on the rate of change of reciprocal plasma creatinine (multiplied by an average rate of urinary creatinine excretion in each study) were equally misleading, even though less variable. We conclude that sequential creatinine measurementss are often misleading as measures of progression and should, when feasible, be replaced by urinary clearances of isotopes in following patients with chronic renal failure.

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Walser, M., Drew, H. H., & LaFrance, N. D. (1988). Creatinine measurements often yield false estimates of progression in chronic renal failure. Kidney International, 34(3), 412–418. https://doi.org/10.1038/ki.1988.196

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