Ah. Tzamaloukas et al., GENDER, DEGREE OF OBESITY, AND DISCREPANCY BETWEEN UREA AND CREATININE CLEARANCE IN PERITONEAL-DIALYSIS, Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, 9(3), 1998, pp. 497-499
The effect of gender and degree of obesity on the size indicators V, u
sed to normalize urea clearance (Kt/V-ur), and body surface area (BSA)
, used to normalize creatinine clearance (C-cr), in peritoneal dialysi
s was studied by: (1) mathematical comparison of the formulae used to
estimate V (Watson and Hume) with the Dubois formula used to estimate
BSA in peritoneal dialysis; and (2) comparison of percent deviation of
BSA (Delta BSA%) and V (Delta V%) from ideal weight estimates in 933
clearance studies performed in actual patients (555 in men and 378 in
women on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis). V was estimated b
y the Watson formulae and BSA by the Dubois formula in these studies.
Delta BSA% and Delta V% were stratified in 10% increments in deviation
of body weight from ideal (Delta W%) in these studies. Mathematically
, the relationship between V and BSA is not linear. In the same subjec
t, as obesity develops (Delta W% increases) and BSA increases in a lin
ear manner, V increases exponentially. In addition, there are substant
ial differences in the relationship between V and BSA caused by gender
. For the same height and BSA, men have a larger V than women. In the
clearance studies performed in actual continuous ambulatory peritoneal
dialysis patients, the difference between Delta V% and Delta BSA% inc
reased significantly (P < 0.0001) from the wasted to the obese subject
s by one-way ANOVA in both men and women. Normalization of urea and cr
eatinine clearances by different size indicators creates two types of
mathematical distortion in the relationship between the two clearances
. One distortion is caused by the degree of obesity. The second distor
tion is caused by gender. Use of the same size indicator to normalize
both urea and creatinine clearances would eliminate these distortions.