Cystatin C improves the detection of mild renal dysfunction in older patients

Abstract
Background: Conventional estimates of glomerular dysfunction, including serum creatinine and creatinine clearance, are inadequate in older people. In this study we have compared the diagnostic accuracy of a novel test of kidney disease, cystatin C, against these markers in older patients with a range of renal function. Methods: Fifty-three patients (mean age 79.6 years, range 69-92 years) with a variety of medical diagnoses were recruited via outpatient clinics. Exclusion criteria included active rheumatoid disease, known current malignancy, renal replacement therapy/renal transplantation and cognitive impairment. 51Cr-EDTA was used as the reference method against which the other markers of glomerular filtration rate were compared using regression analyses. Results: The best fit with glomerular filtration rate was given by Cockcroft and Gault calculated clearance ( R2 = 0.83), followed by serum cystatin C ( R2 = 0.79), serum creatinine ( R2 = 0.76) and creatinine clearance ( R2 = 0.73). The accuracy for glomerular filtration rate prediction was poor for all markers. Serum cystatin C detected nearly all patients with mild renal impairment whereas serum creatinine only detected half of these cases. Regression modelling predicted that the upper limit of normal for serum cystatin C would be exceeded as glomerular filtration rate fell below 64 mL/min/1.73 m2, compared with 44 mL/min/1.73 m2 for serum creatinine. Conclusion: Serum cystatin C is a simple and sensitive screening test for kidney dysfunction in older people.

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