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Comparison of Measured and Predicted Creatinine Excretion is An Unreliable Index of Compliance in Pd Patients
Author(s) -
Blake Peter G.,
Spanner Evelyn,
McMurray Susan,
Lindsay Robert M.,
Ferguson Evelyn
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
peritoneal dialysis international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.79
H-Index - 83
eISSN - 1718-4304
pISSN - 0896-8608
DOI - 10.1177/089686089601600211
Subject(s) - peritoneal dialysis , medicine , creatinine , compliance (psychology) , excretion , index (typography) , renal function , urology , intensive care medicine , psychology , social psychology , world wide web , computer science
Objective To evaluate the use of the ratio of measured to predicted creatinine excretion as an index of compliance in peritoneal dialysis (PD) patients.Design A prospective analysis.Setting Academic teaching hospital dialysis unit.Patients Forty-three patients on PD.Measurements Creatinine excretion in daily dialysate and urine collections was measured on one occasion in 10 patients and on two occasions in 33 patients, and, after adding an estimate for extrarenal creatinine degradation, was divided by predicted creatinine excretion to give a creatinine excretion ratio, which has been proposed as an index of compliance with exchanges in PD patients. Values above 1.24 have been suggested to indicate non-compliance. Lean body mass was also estimated from creatinine excretion.Results The mean creatinine excretion ratio was 1.12, and 30% of patients had a value above 1.3. Only one patient admitted noncompliance. Studies on four consecutive days of guaranteed compliance in 7 patients with high ratios showed that creatinine excretion remained constant, suggesting that the patients were high creatinine producers rather than noncompliant. Creatinine excretion was stable when measured at intervals of days, but over months it tended to change markedly in many patients. Lean body mass estimations using creatinine excretion were low in most patients.Conclusion Comparison of measured and predicted creatinine excretion is not a reliable indicator of noncompliance because many compliant patients consistently excrete more creatinine than predicted. The standard formulas were not validated in dialysis patients and underestimate creatinine excretion significantly in many PD patients. Existing estimates in the literature of non-compliance, using this methodology, may not be accurate. Better methods of detecting this problem are required.

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