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NDT Advance Access published online on September 4, 2008

Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, doi:10.1093/ndt/gfn473
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© The Author [2008]. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of ERA-EDTA. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org



Impact of age on glomerular filtration estimates

Pierre Douville1, Ariane R. Martel1, Jean Talbot1, Simon Desmeules2, Serge Langlois2 and Mohsen Agharazii2

1 Service de biochimie médicale 2 Service de néphrologie, CHUQ—L’Hôtel-Dieu de Québec, Québec, Canada

Correspondence and offprint requests to: Pierre Douville, Service de biochimie médicale, CHUQ—L’Hôtel-Dieu de Québec, 11 Côte du Palais, Québec (Québec), G1R 2J6, Canada. Tel: +1-418-691-5135; Fax: +1-418-691-5709; E-mail: Pierre.douville{at}chuq.qc.ca



  Abstract

Background. Glomerular filtration decreases progressively with age in adults. Predictive equation should have proper modelling to adequately account for normal senescence.

Methods. Corrected 24-h creatinine clearances (CCLs) were measured in a cohort of 773 outpatients from 18 to 90 years old. Multiple linear regression was used to model the effect of age on glomerular filtration. Comparisons were made with the simplified MDRD and the MAYO equations. Impact of the derived equation was tested in a second cohort of 7551 patients with normal serum creatinine.

Results. While all equations show declining function with age, our results suggest that the GFR reduction is progressive after the age of 30 and continue to decline steadily after the age of 60. This leads to a convex curve in the multiple regression analysis that is best fitted by an equation including the quadratic term (age2). In contrast, the MDRD equation produces a faster decrease in early adulthood and a flatter curve after the age of 60 while the MAYO equation produces a more linear effect. MDRD results in the normal range are lower than those estimated by the MAYO equation. These equations, as applied on an independent cohort of 7551 normal outpatients from 18 to 102 years, produce different profile of evolution of GFR with age.

Conclusions. Inclusion of a quadratic term for age in the formula estimating GFR results in better modelling of the natural decline of renal function associated with ageing. Furthermore, as GFR steadily declines after the age of 30, a single cut-off value of GFR normality for all ages leads to underdiagnosis of young adults and over diagnosis of elderly individuals. Guidelines should take into account the observed reduction of kidney function with age in normal population for optimal evaluation of eGFR.

Keywords: age; clearance; creatinine; GFR; glomerular filtration

Received for publication: 21. 9.07
Accepted in revised form: 29. 7.08


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