Estimated GFR

Introduction

Glomerular filtration rate can only be determined accurately by direct measurement of renal clearance of markers such as inulin, 51Cr-EDTA, 125I-iothalamate or iohexol, but GFR can be estimated from serum creatinine using a number of established formulae. There is no perfect formula for all levels of renal function, and all formulae can be inaccurate if renal function is unstable, at extremes of BMI, in pregnancy, muscle wasting or gross oedema.

The CKD-EPI(1) and abbreviated MDRD(2) formulae are the ones most commonly used for adults, and are both based on large numbers of patients with direct GFR measurement and standardised serum creatinine measurements using isotope dilution mass spectrometry. The CKD-EPI formula is more accurate for patients with GFR greater than 60 ml/min, although as both formulae are based on regression splines, neither is accurate for GFR greater than 90ml/min. The MDRD formula was updated in 2005, and this later revision is used in this package. The CKD-EPI formula was recommended for estimation of GFR in adults in NICE Clinical Guideline 128 (2014). In the USA, the MDRD formula was recommended in NKF-KDOQI 2002, and the CKD-EPI formula recommended by KDIGO 2013. Both produce an estimate of GFR for a patient with body surface area of 1.73m2.

The bedside Schwartz(3) formula is more accurate in children, and recommended for GFR estimation in patients under 19 by the National Kidney Federation and National Kidney Disease Education Program in the USA.

The Cockcroft-Gault(4) equation estimates creatinine clearance rather than GFR and tends to overestimate actual GFR as creatinine is cleared from the kidney by tubular secretion as well as glomerular filtration. It is still widely used for renal drug dosing, although the National Kidney Federation in the USA recommend CKD-EPI or MDRD instead.

Results from eGFR calculators may vary due rounding errors. The functions in the transplantr package convert creatinine units as 1.00 mg/dl being equal to 88.4 µmol/l

I find the functions are easiest to use with dplyr, using the mutate() verb inside a pipe.

library(transplantr)
library(dplyr)
#> 
#> Attaching package: 'dplyr'
#> The following objects are masked from 'package:stats':
#> 
#>     filter, lag
#> The following objects are masked from 'package:base':
#> 
#>     intersect, setdiff, setequal, union

CKD-EPI formula

The CKD-EPI formula eGFR is calculated from age, sex and ethnicity as well as serum creatinine. The basic function to return its value is ckd_epi() which takes creatinine in either µmol/l (by default) or mg/dl, age in years, sex as 0 for female or 1 for male, and ethnicity as "black" or "non-black". The units parameter defines the units used for serum creatinine, taking a value of either "SI" for µmol/l or "US" for mg/dl; if the parameter is not provided, it defaults to "SI".

There is also a ckd_epi_US() wrapper function which uses mg/dl as the creatinine unit. This is quicker to type than ckd_epi(..., units = "US") but is very fractionally slower.

This is a vectorised function, which takes numeric vectors as its input and returns a numeric vector. I would typically call the function from within a mutate() call in a dplyr pipe, which adds a new variable to the dataframe:

data(results)

results2 <- results %>%
  mutate(eGFR = ckd_epi(creat = Creatinine, age = Age, sex = Sex, eth = Ethnicity))

results2
#> # A tibble: 4 x 7
#>   Creatinine   Age Sex   Ethnicity Weight Height  eGFR
#>        <dbl> <dbl> <chr> <chr>      <dbl>  <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1        101    45 M     non-black     71    177  77.0
#> 2        201    65 F     non-black     54    154  21.9
#> 3        301    72 M     black         81    183  19.7
#> 4        450    54 F     black         85    165  10.3

If creatinine is measured in mg/dl, the variant code would be one of these two alternatives:

data(results_US)

# using the standard function
results_US2 <- results_US %>%
  mutate(eGFR = ckd_epi(creat = Creatinine, age = Age, sex = Sex,
        eth = Ethnicity, units = "US"))

# using the wrapper function
results_US3 <- results_US %>%
          mutate(eGFR = ckd_epi_US(creat = Creatinine, age = Age, sex = Sex,
          eth = Ethnicity))

results_US2
#> # A tibble: 4 x 7
#>   Creatinine   Age Sex   Ethnicity Weight Height  eGFR
#>        <dbl> <dbl> <chr> <chr>      <dbl>  <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1       1.14    45 M     non-black     71    177  77.0
#> 2       2.27    65 F     non-black     54    154  21.9
#> 3       3.40    72 M     black         81    183  19.7
#> 4       5.09    54 F     black         85    165  10.3

results_US3
#> # A tibble: 4 x 7
#>   Creatinine   Age Sex   Ethnicity Weight Height  eGFR
#>        <dbl> <dbl> <chr> <chr>      <dbl>  <dbl> <dbl>
#> 1       1.14    45 M     non-black     71    177  77.0
#> 2       2.27    65 F     non-black     54    154  21.9
#> 3       3.40    72 M     black         81    183  19.7
#> 4       5.09    54 F     black         85    165  10.3

If you don’t like dplyr, the functions also work well within Base R:

mydata$eGFR <- ckd_epi(creat = SCr, age = Age, sex = Sex, eth = Ethnicity)

Calculating serial eGFR Results

In renal transplant follow-up, it is common to report eGFR at various timepoints, such as 1, 2 and 5 year eGFR. This is facilitated by the ckd_epi() function using the optional offset parameter which adds a year to the baseline age. For example, to calculate 1 and 5 year eGFR, the code would be something like this:

Abbreviated MDRD formula

Using abbreviated MDRD formula eGFR is also calculated from age, sex and ethnicity as well as serum creatinine. The basic function to return its value is mdrd() which takes creatinine in either µmol/l (by default) or mg/dl, age in years, sex as 0 for female or 1 for male, and ethnicity as "black" or "non-black". The units parameter defines the units used for serum creatinine, taking a value of either "SI" for µmol/l or "US" for mg/dl; if the parameter is not provided, it defaults to "SI".

Like CKD-EPI function, there is also a mdrd_US() wrapper function which uses mg/dl as the creatinine unit.

This is also vectorised function, and is generally called from within a mutate() call in a dplyr pipe:

results2m <- results %>%
  mutate(eGFR = mdrd(creat = Creatinine, age = Age, sex = Sex, eth = Ethnicity))

Using mg/dl as units or base R work in the same way as the ckd_epi() formula, and the mdrd() can also accept an optional offset parameter to facilitate serial results.

There is also a fuller six-variable MDRD formula which may be added to this package in the future. The six-variable formula includes albumin and either urea or blood urea nitrogen (BUN).

Schwartz formula

The bedside Schwartz formula is used for children under 19 and is a simpler version of the original Schwartz formula published in 1984. It is calculated using the schwartz() function and uses serum creatinine in either µmol/l (by default) or mg/dl and height in cm. Like the other formulae in the package, the units parameter defines the units used for serum creatinine, taking a value of either "SI" for µmol/l or "US" for mg/dl; if the parameter is not provided, it defaults to "SI". There is also a schwartz_US() wrapper function which uses mg/dl.

results2p <- results %>%
  mutate(eGFR = schwartz(creat = Creatinine, height = Height))

In the same way as the CKD-EPI and MDRD functions, using the optional offset parameter helps to generate serial results.

Cockcroft-Gault formula

The Cockcroft-Gault formula provides a reasonably accurate estimation of creatinine clearance, but this is not the same as glomerular filtration as creatinine is also cleared by tubular secretion, and so the equation tends to overestimate GFR by up to 25%. It is still used in renal dose calculations in the UK, although the US guidance is to use CKD-EPI or MDRD instead. It is also worth noting that the methodology from which it was derived assumes ideal body weight.

In the transplantr package, the creatinine clearance can be calculated with the cockcroft() function, which takes creatinine, age, sex and weight as core arguments. The creatinine is in µmol/l by default, but can be changed to mg/dl either by specifying units to be "US" or by calling the wrapper function cockcroft_US(). Ideal body weight can be calculated from height and sex using the ibw() function. An example using a dplyr pipe:

results2cg <- results %>%
  mutate(Ideal.Weight = ibw(height = Height, sex = Sex),
         CrClear = cockcroft(creat = Creatinine, age = Age, sex = Sex,
                             weight = Ideal.Weight))

Formulae to be added in future

The Nankivell and Walser formulae are less commonly used. The Nankivell formula is the only eGFR formula derived entirely from renal transplant patients, but included patients with unstable GFR(5). The Nankivell formula includes weight and height so approximates an absolute GFR. The Walser formula produces a result standardised to a height-squared of 3m2(6).

Both are now available using the nankivell() and walser() functions, but as they are so little used, and have been quoted in varying forms in the literature, it has not been possible to run automated tests so either function may return wrong results.

References

  1. Levey AS, Stevens LA, Schmid CH, et al. for the CKD-EPI (Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration). A new equation to estimate glomerular filtration rate. Ann Intern Med 2009; 150(9):604-612. DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-150-9-200905050-00006

  2. Levey AS, Greene T, Kusek JW, et al. A simplified equation to predict glomerular filtration rate from serum creatinine. J Am Soc Nephrol 2000; 11:A0828.

  3. Schwartz GJ, Munoz A, Schneider MF et al. New equations to estimate GFR in children with CKD. J Am Soc Nephrol 2009; 20(3):629-637. DOI: 10.1681/ASN.2008030287

  4. Cockcroft DW, Gault MH. Prediction of creatinine clearance from serum creatinine. Nephron 1976; 16(1):31-41. DOI: 10.1159/000180580

  5. Nankivell BJ, Gruenwald SM, Allen RD, Chapman JR: Predicting glomerular filtration rate after renal transplantation. Transplantation 1995; 59:1683-89.

  6. Walser M, Drew HH, Guldan JL. Prediction of glomerular filtration rate in advanced chronic renal failure. Kidney International 1993; 44:2245-1148.