Practical Laboratory Medicine (Aug 2022)

Point of care creatinine derived eGFR measurement in capillary blood for identifying patients at risk

  • Sandrine Lemoine,
  • Anne-Cécile Rouveure,
  • Laurence Dubourg,
  • Solenne Pelletier,
  • Christelle Marolho,
  • Evelyne Decullier,
  • Maurice Laville

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 31
p. e00296

Abstract

Read online

Introduction: The aim of the study was to assess the clinical reliability of eGFR values estimated with a creatinine measurement from a point of care (StatSensor®) compared with measured GFR (mGFR) by a gold standard method. Methods: We prospectively included 113 patients undergoing renal function assessment. We compared eGFR using creatinine from capillary blood or venous blood measured by StatSensor® and measured GFR (mGFR) by Passing Bablok regression. Performance of eGFR was estimated by biais, precision and accuracy. Results: A total of 113 subjects were included. Median eGFR values were 59 (10–132), 52 (10–123) and 51 (10–131) ml/min/1.73 m2 for enzymatic, capillary and venous measurements, respectively. There was no difference between P30 and P10 for the three eGFR values (p = 0.11 and p = 0.1 respectively). StatSensor® eGFR tended to be underestimated compared to mGFR. For CKD stage 4/5 patients, concordance was 79 and 84% for eGFR with capillary creatinine and venous creatinine respectively. For mGFR< 60 ml/min/1.73 m2, concordance was 84 and 88% with capillary creatinine and venous creatinine respectively. Conclusion: The use of a handheld blood creatinine monitoring system with eGFR calculation provides a good estimation of GFR and allow to identify patients at high risk of acute kidney injury.