Chronic Kidney Disease - Graduate Pharmacy Lecture Notes

Chronic Kidney Disease

Comprehensive Note for Graduate Pharmacy Students

Source: Review Article from Revista da Associação Médica Brasileira (2020)

Authors: Adriano Luiz Ammirati

Summary

Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a highly prevalent condition (10-13% of the population) characterized by irreversible and progressive loss of renal function, associated with increased cardiovascular risk. Patients often remain asymptomatic until advanced stages, presenting complications typical of renal dysfunction. Management includes conservative treatment (for patients with GFR >15 ml/min) and renal replacement therapy (hemodialysis, peritoneal dialysis, transplantation). Conservative management aims to slow disease progression, treat complications (anemia, bone disorders, CVD), provide hepatitis B vaccination, and prepare for renal replacement therapy.

Key Pharmacist Takeaways: CKD management requires a multidisciplinary approach. Pharmacists play crucial roles in medication optimization, monitoring for nephrotoxicity, managing complications (anemia, mineral disorders), patient education, and vaccination coordination.

Definition & Diagnosis

CKD is defined as a clinical syndrome secondary to definitive changes in kidney structure/function, characterized by irreversibility and slow progression. Diagnosis requires persistence for ≥3 months of either:

  • Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) < 60 mL/min/1.73 m², OR
  • GFR ≥ 60 mL/min/1.73 m² with evidence of kidney damage (albuminuria, imaging abnormalities, hematuria, biopsy changes, etc.)

Albuminuria definition: >30 mg albumin in 24-hour urine or >30 mg/g albumin in spot urine adjusted by creatinine.

Major Etiologies: Diabetes, hypertension, glomerulonephritis, chronic pyelonephritis, prolonged NSAID use, autoimmune diseases, polycystic kidney disease, congenital malformations, and post-acute kidney injury.

Also Read Pathophysiology and Classification of Kidney Diseases

Classification & Staging

CKD is classified based on GFR and albuminuria categories, which together predict progression risk and guide management intensity.

Table 1: CKD Stages by GFR

Stage GFR (mL/min/1.73m²) Classification
I>90Normal or High
II60–89Slightly decreased
III A45–59Mild to moderately decreased
III B30–44Moderately to severely decreased
IV15–29Severely decreased
V3 months is classified as CKD Stage IIIB A2.

Risk Stratification

The combination of GFR and albuminuria categories determines the risk of CKD progression (Table 3 in original). Higher albuminuria and lower GFR correspond to very high risk. Risk prediction should also incorporate cause of kidney disease, age, sex, race, comorbidities, and lifestyle factors.

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Epidemiology

CKD prevalence in US adults is ~13.1%. Brazilian estimates vary, with 3-6 million potentially affected. The 2017 Brazilian Society of Nephrology census reported 126,583 patients on dialysis (prevalence ~610 per million population).

Mortality: Reduced GFR accounted for 4% of global deaths in 2013 (2.2 million), with >50% cardiovascular-related. Annual dialysis mortality in Brazil is 19.9%.

Screening & Referral

Screening Indications:

  • Diabetes, hypertension, CVD, HIV/HCV infection, malignancy, autoimmune diseases, nephrolithiasis, recurrent UTIs
  • Family history of kidney disease

Assessment Includes:

  1. Serum creatinine with GFR estimation (EPI-CKD formula preferred over MDRD)
  2. Albumin/creatinine ratio in spot urine (preferred over protein/creatinine ratio)
  3. Renal ultrasound

Nephrology Referral Criteria:

  • GFR < 30 mL/min/1.73 m²
  • GFR decline ≥ 25% or >5 mL/min/year
  • Significant albuminuria
  • Unexplained hematuria
  • Secondary hyperparathyroidism, metabolic acidosis, erythropoietin-deficiency anemia
  • Resistant hypertension (≥4 agents)
  • Persistent hyperkalemia
  • Recurrent nephrolithiasis
  • Hereditary kidney disease or unknown etiology

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Conservative Management Framework

Four Pillars of Conservative Management:

  1. Slow CKD progression
  2. Treat complications (anemia, bone disease, electrolytes, CVD)
  3. Immunization (especially Hepatitis B)
  4. Preparation for renal replacement therapy

Multidisciplinary Team: Essential for optimal care—includes pharmacy, nutrition, nursing, psychology, and social work.

1. Slowing Progression

Strategies:

  • ACE inhibitors or ARBs for proteinuria >500 mg/24h
  • Blood pressure target
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