Schwartz formula: is one k-coefficient adequate for all children?

BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Plasma-creatinine-based equations to estimate the glomerular filtration rate are recommended by several clinical guidelines. In 2009, Schwartz et al. adapted the traditional Schwartz equation to children and adolescents but did not find different k-coefficients between children...

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書目詳細資料
Main Authors: Vandrea Carla De Souza, Muriel Rabilloud, Pierre Cochat, Luciano Selistre, Aoumeur Hadj-Aissa, Behrouz Kassai, Bruno Ranchin, Ulla Berg, Maria Herthelius, Laurence Dubourg
格式: Article
語言:English
出版: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
叢編:PLoS ONE
在線閱讀:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3532344?pdf=render
實物特徵
總結:BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVE: Plasma-creatinine-based equations to estimate the glomerular filtration rate are recommended by several clinical guidelines. In 2009, Schwartz et al. adapted the traditional Schwartz equation to children and adolescents but did not find different k-coefficients between children and adolescents (k = 36.5 for all patients). We reevaluated the coefficient of the 2009-Schwartz formula according to sex and age in a pediatric population. PATIENTS/METHODS: We used linear mixed-effects models to reestimate the 2009-Schwartz k-coefficient in 360 consecutive French subjects aged 1 to 18 years referred to a single centre between July 2003 and July 2010 (965 measurements). We assessed the agreement between the estimated glomerular filtration rate obtained with the new formula (called Schwartz-Lyon) and the rate measured by inulin clearance. We then compared this agreement to the one between the measured glomerular filtration rate and 2009-Schwartz formula, first in the French then in a Swedish cohort. RESULTS: In Schwartz-Lyon formula, k was estimated at 32.5 in boys <13 years and all girls and at 36.5 in boys aged ≥13 years. The performance of this formula was higher than that of 2009-Schwartz formula in children <13 years. This was first supported by a statistically significant reduction of the overestimation of the measured glomerular filtration rate in both cohorts, by better 10% and 30% accuracies, and by a better concordance correlation coefficient. CONCLUSIONS: The performance and simplicity of Schwartz formula are strong arguments for its routine use in children and adolescents. The specific coefficient for children aged <13 years further improves this performance.
ISSN:1932-6203