@article{0437c7f17e1c422db9fa196afb26040f,
title = "Universal GFR determination based on two time points during plasma iohexol disappearance",
abstract = "An optimal measurement of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) should minimize the number of blood draws, and reduce procedural invasiveness and the burden to study personnel and cost, without sacrificing accuracy. Equations have been proposed to calculate GFR from the slow compartment separately for adults and children. To develop a universal equation, we used 1347 GFR measurements from two diverse groups consisting of 527 men in the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study and 514 children in the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children cohort. Both studies used nearly identical two-compartment (fast and slow) protocols to measure GFR. To estimate the fast component from markers of body size and of the slow component, we used standard linear regression methods with the log-transformed fast area as the dependent variable. The fast area could be accurately estimated from body surface area by a simple parameter (6.4/body surface area) with no residual dependence on the slow area or other markers of body size. Our equation measures only the slow iohexol plasma disappearance curve with as few as two time points and was normalized to 1.73 m 2 body surface area. It is of the form: GFRslowGFR/10.12(slowGFR/100). In a random sample utilizing a third of the patients for validation, there was excellent agreement between the calculated and measured GFR with low root mean square errors being 4.6 and 1.5 ml/min per 1.73 m 2 for adults and children, respectively. Thus, our proposed simple equation, developed in a combined patient group with a broad range of GFRs, may be applied universally and is independent of the injected amount of iohexol.",
keywords = "glomerular filtration rate, iohexol, kidney disease, nephrology, plasma disappearance curves, renal function",
author = "Ng, {Derek K.S.} and Schwartz, {George J.} and Jacobson, {Lisa P.} and Palella, {Frank J.} and Margolick, {Joseph B.} and Warady, {Bradley A.} and Furth, {Susan L.} and Alvaro Mũoz",
note = "Funding Information: Data in this article were collected by the Chronic Kidney Disease in Children prospective cohort study (CKiD) with clinical coordinating centers (principal investigators) at Children's Mercy Hospital and the University of Missouri–Kansas City (BAW), The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia (SLF), data coordinating center at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (AM), and the Central Biochemistry Laboratory at the University of Rochester (GJS). The CKiD is funded by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, with additional funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (U01 DK82194, U01-DK-66143, U01-DK-66174, and U01-DK-66116). The CKiD website is located at http://www.statepi.jhsph.edu/ckid . Data in this manuscript were also collected by the Multicenter AIDS Cohort Study (MACS) with centers (principal investigators) at The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health (JBM, LPJ), Howard Brown Health Center, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, and Cook County Bureau of Health Services (John P. Phair, Steven M. Wolinsky), University of California, Los Angeles (Roger Detels), University of Pittsburgh (Charles R. Rinaldo), and the Central Biochemistry Laboratory at the University of Rochester (GJS). The MACS is funded by the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, with additional supplemental funding from the National Cancer Institute (UO1-AI-35042, UL1-RR025005 (GCRC), UO1-AI-35043, UO1-AI-35039, UO1-AI-35040, and UO1-AI-35041). Website located at http://www.statepi.jhsph.edu/macs/macs.html . We are grateful to GE Healthcare, Amersham Division, for providing the CKiD and MACS studies with ioxehol (Omnipaque) for the GFR measurements.",
year = "2011",
month = aug,
day = "2",
doi = "10.1038/ki.2011.155",
language = "English (US)",
volume = "80",
pages = "423--430",
journal = "Kidney international",
issn = "0085-2538",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
number = "4",
}