Bioelectrical Impedance Measurements for Assessment of Kidney Function in Critically Ill Patients.

Department of Clinical Pharmacy, Gelre Hospitals, Apeldoorn, The Netherlands. Department of Intensive Care, Gelre Hospitals, Apeldoorn, The Netherlands.

Critical care medicine. 2019;(12):e984-e992

Abstract

OBJECTIVES To evaluate the use of multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis to predict creatinine/urea clearance based on 24 hours urine collection. A practical formula was developed, and its performance was compared with that of established formulas such as Cockcroft-Gault, Modification of Diet in Renal Disease, and Jelliffe's. DESIGN An open-label prospective observational cohort study. SETTING A 12-bed ICU at a nonuniversity major teaching hospital (Gelre ziekenhuizen Apeldoorn/Zutphen, The Netherlands). PATIENTS Adult critical care patients with an expected ICU length of stay at admission of at least 48 hours. INTERVENTIONS Each patient's body composition was assessed using a validated Quadscan 4000 analyzer (Bodystat, Isle of Man, British Isles). Twenty-four hours urine was collected, and laboratory variables in serum including creatinine, urea, and albumin were obtained at the beginning and end of the collection period. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS A total of 151 patients, stratified to an acute and nonacute ICU-group, were enrolled in the study over a 2-year period. A formula to predict creatinine/urea clearance based on 24 hours urine collection was developed using stepwise linear regression using a training data set of 75 patients. This formula was subsequently tested and compared with other relevant predictive equations using a validation data set of 76 patients. Serum creatinine values ranged from 40 to 446 µmol/L. With the predictive model based on estimated body cell mass and a "prediction marker" more than 71% of the observed variance in creatinine/urea clearance based on 24 hours urine collection could be explained. Predictive performance was superior to the other eight evaluated models (R = 0.39-0.55) and demonstrated to be constant over the whole range of creatinine/urea clearance based on 24 hours urine collection values. CONCLUSIONS Multifrequency bioelectrical impedance analysis measurements can be used to predict creatinine/urea clearance based on 24 hours urine collection with superior performance than currently established prediction models. This rapid, noninvasive method enables correction for influences of a patient's actual body composition and may prove valuable in daily clinical practice.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Comparative Study ; Observational Study

Metadata