Editor-in-Chief Comment Chronic Kidney Disease - How Many Have It?

2002 
To the great credit of a generation of both basic and clinical investigators in nephrology, considerable progress has been made in the past two decades in slowing the progression of chronic kidney disease (CKD) by identifying those factors that cause progression and treating them. Appropriately, attention has now turned to identifying those individuals suffering from CKD so that appropriate interventions to reduce the anticipated epidemic of end-stage renal disease (ESRD) can be initiated. For a subspecialty focused on an organ in which multiple functions, including overall GFR, can be very precisely quantitated, this task sounds easy. However, as the two letters and editorial in this section demonstrate, it isn’t. In the May issue of JASN, Clase et al. (1) applied four equations that predict GFR from measurements of serum creatinine (Scr) with Scr values obtained in 13,251 normal, nondiabetic adults in the Third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III). They arrived at the rather startling conclusion that CKD was as much as a log factor more common than previously predicted; for example, 13% of the population had GFR below 60 ml/min per 1.73 m 2 , and these figures were significantly higher in the elderly. Clase et al. conclude by recommending that predictive equations to calculate GFR not be routinely applied by laboratories that measure Scr until further research is done to determine the meaning of their observations. A subsequent editorial by Coladonato et al. (2) also cautions against overinterpretation of these data and outlines the many consequences of overestimating the CKD population. No one knows, for example, whether a low GFR measurement reflects a longstanding stable situation or a point
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