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Kidney Disease Missed in Women

Kidney Disease Missed in Women

Reported November 03, 2009

(Ivanhoe Newswire) — Women are at particular risk of missed diagnosis of chronic kidney disease (CKD).

To measure kidney function, primary care doctors typically order a blood test called creatinine, but Dr. Maya Rao, M.D., of Columbia University, was quoted as saying that this alone is not a particularly accurate measure of kidney function. The serum creatinine should also be plugged into a formula that gives an estimated kidney filtration rate, called glomerular filtration rate, or eGFR, which is a much more accurate estimate of kidney function.

Women have a lower eGFR than men for the same level of serum creatinine. Thus, the same serum creatinine level that initially appears normal for both a man and a woman can translate into depressed kidney function for the woman, making her at higher risk for undetected kidney disease. In the study, lab reports that automatically included the eGFR calculation did not show a gender disparity in diagnosis of patients — suggesting that including this value on all serum creatinine lab reports could improve diagnosis of CKD in women.

 

 

CKD affects up to 19 million adults in the U.S. and is usually diagnosed and treated in the primary care setting. Dr. Rao reviewed records from 900 patients at 18 rural, community-based primary care clinics in Oregon to investigate whether primary care physicians accurately diagnosed CKD in patients with known kidney dysfunction. The analysis showed that 52.4 percent of patients found to have CKD did not have a diagnosis in their charts. Except at the most advanced stages of CKD, females were more likely than males to go undiagnosed.

“Chronic kidney disease is very prevalent, uses a great deal of Medicare dollars and needs to be detected early in order to begin an effective treatment plan,” Dr. Rao was quoted as saying. “Without early diagnosis and treatment, the patient may be more likely to need dialysis and suffer related consequences, such as heart disease. This study shows that CKD is still being missed by primary care physicians, especially among women patients, and that more education is needed to ultimately improve early detection and diagnosis.”

SOURCE: Presented at the American Society of Nephrology Annual Meeting, San Diego, October 31, 2009

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