1. De-indexed estimated glomerular filtration rates for the dosing of oral antidiabetic drugs in patients with chronic kidney disease
- Author
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Maxime Pluquet, Marie Metzger, Christian Jacquelinet, Christian Combe, Denis Fouque, Maurice Laville, Luc Frimat, Ziad A. Massy, Sophie Liabeuf, and Solène M. Laville
- Subjects
chronic kidney disease ,diabetes mellitus ,kidney function estimation ,oral antidiabetic drug ,prescribing ,pharmacoepidemiology ,Therapeutics. Pharmacology ,RM1-950 - Abstract
Introduction: Adjusting drug dose levels based on equations that standardize the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) to a body surface area (BSA) of 1.73 m2 can pose challenges, especially for patients with extremely high or low body mass index (BMI). The objective of the present study of patients with CKD and diabetes was to assess the impact of deindexing creatinine-based equations on estimates of kidney function and on the frequency of inappropriate prescriptions of oral antidiabetic drugs (OADs).Methods: The prospective CKD-REIN cohort is comprised of patients with eGFR 1.73 m2. Deindexing the kidney function estimates led to higher eGFRs, especially in BMI group 3. The proportion of patients with at least one inappropriate prescription differed greatly when comparing indexed and deindexed estimates. The magnitude of the difference increased with the BMI: when comparing BMI group 1 with BMI group 3, the difference was respectively −4% and −10% between deindexed 2021 CKD-EPI and indexed CKD-EPI. Metformin and sitagliptin were the most frequent inappropriately prescribed OADs.Conclusion: We highlight significant differences between the BSA-indexed and deindexed versions of equations used to estimate kidney function, emphasizing the importance of using deindexed estimates to adjust drug dose levels - especially in patients with an extreme BMI.
- Published
- 2024
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