Joel M. Topf, MD FACP Profile picture
Dec 9, 2021 11 tweets 5 min read Read on X
I am going to try to recap my recent grand rounds on race and GFR in a few #tweetorials. Here is the fourth one. You can find the presentation files and a video of me presenting at pbfluids.com/2021/12/the-ne………… 1/10
So both MDRD and CKD-EPI found that Black Americans had a higher GFR (on average) for the same creatinine compared to White Americans. Also NHANES showed that Black people have higher creatinines than White people. Why? ajkd.org/article/S0272-… 2/10
Looking at non-creatinine determinants of GFR there are a limited number of variables. Though I included "metabolism" that only comes in play at high serum creatinine so that can't be the factor here.

Increased production from increased muscle mass was the prime suspect. 3/10
In the 1999 MDRD study, Levey et al. presumed that the increased GFR in Black Americans was due to increased muscle mass. They provided 3 references for this and they are a clown show 🤡 4/10
Black people having Increased muscle mass is a longtime racial stereotype that was largely accepted by medicine. But when people did question this it doesn't hold up.
Looking at serum Cr can be difficult because it is confounded by GFR, so Hsu et al looked at anuric dialysis patients and found here, with a GFR of zero, Black people still had higher serum Cr, and surprisingly, adjusting for muscle mass DID NOT eliminate the differences!😮 5/10
Levey and Co did an analysis to see if they could remove race from the GFR equations by replacing it with height and weight, presuming that if race was a proxy for size, this would work pretty well. Nope. Adding height and weight did not account for the differences. 6/10
So we know that Black people in our study samples have high GFR for the same Cr but we don't know why. I think it is diet but GI excretion is possible. Tubular secretion falls down because of anuric dialysis studies

But we really don't know and we should investigate this 7/10
Despite not knowing why it performs this way, eGFR provides a signal of increased health in a group of people who have worse kidney outcomes. This is perverse. 8/10
Anyone who has visited a few dialysis units in the US can't avoid noticing the racial disparity. Black Americans face almost 3 times the incidence of ESKD as White people. 9/10
But what is less well known is that the prevalence of CKD is almost the same

Black Americans: 16%
White Americans 15.7%

Despite the same rate of CKD Black people reach ESKD 3x more often. Delaying diagnosis in this group is counter to any sane public health policy. 10/10

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More from @kidney_boy

Sep 21
Next session started by Rovin to talk about IGAN pathophysiology and the selection of therapeutics

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Sep 21
Honored to be invited to second annual Rare Kidney Disease Scientific Summit. Amazing cast of physicians in attendance. #RKDSummit
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Brad Rovin and John Barratt (IGAN king) defend the focus on IgAN and FSGS. Update and recap of the last year. #RKDSummit Image
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When we published our study <> of ODS and hyponatremia we were pummeled for including people at low risk of ODS because we included Na levels between 120 and 130. They said it is well known "that ODS is incredibly rare/non-existent at those levels." 1/4evidence.nejm.org/doi/10.1056/EV…
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3/4ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35717664
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Sep 17, 2023
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Nephrogenic systemic fibrosis (NSF) is an iatrogenic disease that presents with hardening of the skin and other organs. It is often lethal. I treated 5 people with this condition (including one with AKI). Terrible.
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The etiology of NSF was unknown and there were many theories. In 2006, Thomas Grobner published a small case series showing 5 patients developing NSF within weeks of receiving gadolinium contrast for MRI.
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Aug 12, 2023
I just recently recommended the Renal Physiology book by Bruce Koeppen and Bruce Stanton. I thought it was a good medical student level text book: pbfluids.com/2023/08/ouwb-s…
But I came across this question in Chapter 8 Regulation of Acid Base. It is a straight forward question asking the learner to interpret simple acid-base cases. Image
But the question falls apart when you look at the answer... Image
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Apr 14, 2023
Lab guy from Yale up next Joe El Khoury He is on YouTube. Episode 1 was on pseudohyponatemia
209 subscribers. Clinical Chemistry with Joe El-Khoury Image
Here is the YouTube channel: youtube.com/@ClinChemJoe

https://t.co/LWupt0HWN1 #NKFClinicals
Despite calling it “laboratory error”, a lot of the problem happens long before the sample gets to the lab. #NKFClinicals Image
Read 9 tweets

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