ESC Heart Failure (Aug 2021)

Serum creatinine and cystatin C‐based estimates of glomerular filtration rate are misleading in acute heart failure

  • Jutta S. Swolinsky,
  • Niklas P. Nerger,
  • David M. Leistner,
  • Frank Edelmann,
  • Fabian Knebel,
  • Enkhtuvshin Tuvshinbat,
  • Caroline Lemke,
  • Robert Roehle,
  • Michael Haase,
  • Maria Rosa Costanzo,
  • Geraldine Rauch,
  • Veselin Mitrovic,
  • Edis Gasanin,
  • Daniel Meier,
  • Peter A. McCullough,
  • Kai‐Uwe Eckardt,
  • Bruce A. Molitoris,
  • Kai M. Schmidt‐Ott

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.13404
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 4
pp. 3070 – 3081

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Aims We aimed to test whether the endogenous filtration markers serum creatinine or cystatin C and equation‐based estimates of glomerular filtration rate (GFR) based on these markers appropriately reflect changes of measured GFR in patients with acute heart failure. Methods In this prospective cohort study of 50 hospitalized acute heart failure patients undergoing decongestive therapy, we applied an intravenous visible fluorescent injectate (VFI), consisting of a low molecular weight component to measure GFR and a high molecular weight component to correct for measured plasma volume. Thirty‐eight patients had two sequential GFR measurements 48 h apart. The co‐primary endpoints of the study were safety of VFI and plasma stability of the high molecular weight component. A key secondary endpoint was to compare changes in measured GFR (mGFR) to changes of serum creatinine, cystatin C and estimated GFR. Results VFI‐based GFR measurements were safe and consistent with plasma stability of the high molecular weight component and glomerular filtration of the low molecular weight component. Filtration marker‐based point estimates of GFR, when compared with mGFR, provided only moderate correlation (Pearson's r, range 0.80–0.88, depending on equation used), precision (r2, range 0.65–0.78) and accuracy (56%–74% of estimates scored within 30% of mGFR). Correlations of 48‐h changes GFR estimates and changes of mGFR were significant (P 15% decrease in mGFR. Conclusions In patients hospitalized for acute heart failure, serum creatinine‐ and cystatin C‐based predictions performed poorly in detecting actual changes of GFR. These data challenge current clinical strategies to evaluate dynamics of kidney function in acute heart failure.

Keywords