Title of article :
Estimating Glomerular Filtration Rate in Overweight and Obese Malaysian Subjects
Author/Authors :
Shaharudin, Nor-Hayati Department of Medicine - Faculty of Medicine - Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia , Abdul Gafor, Abdul Halim Department of Medicine - Faculty of Medicine - Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia , Zainudin, Soehardy Department of Medicine - Faculty of Medicine - Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia , Kong, Norella CT Department of Medicine - Faculty of Medicine - Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia , Aziz, Aini Abdul Departments - Faculty of Medicine - Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia , Shah, Shamsul-Azhar Departments - Faculty of Medicine - Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Pages :
8
From page :
15
To page :
22
Abstract :
Background and Aims: Overweight and obesity are significant risk factors for chronic kidney disease (CKD). Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) is the best index of renal function. We evaluated the accuracy of the Cockroft-Gault, MDRD and modified MDRD formulae in predicting GFR in overweight and obese subjects and also determined the relationship between Body Mass Index (BMI), weight and GFR. Methods: Healthy volunteers with BMI ≥23kg/m² were recruited and subjected to blood and urine investigations, renal ultrasonography and 99mTc-DTPA renal scan. The correlation, accuracy and precision of the eGFR derived from each formula were compared with reference GFR as determined by 99mTc-DTPA. Results: A total of 101 subjects with a median weight of 74.0kg (68.0-84.7) and median BMI of 29.6 kg/ m² (27.2-33.2) were recruited. Their mean GFR 99mTc-DTPA was 120.3± 24.5ml/mm/1.73m². Although the eGFRs derived from all formulae correlated with GFR 99mTc-DTPA, only those derived from the MDRD and modified MDRD had small biases and better precision in estimating GFR. While GFR significantly correlated with the subjects’ weight (p=0.036), it didn’t with their BMI (p=0.302). Conclusions: The MDRD-based formulae were better in estimating GFR in overweight and obese Malaysian subjects. GFR correlated with subjects’ weight rather than BMI.
Keywords :
eGFR , Overweight , Obese , CKD , Cockcroft-Gault , MDRD
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics
Serial Year :
2011
Record number :
2433389
Link To Document :
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