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Renal Medicine for Primary Care in 90 minutes. russell.roberts@bthft.nhs.uk. Case 1. 76 year old male Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis Aspirin, simvastatin, ramipril , bendroflumethiazide Annual check up eGFR 42 What next?.
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Renal Medicine for Primary Care in 90 minutes russell.roberts@bthft.nhs.uk
Case 1 • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Aspirin, simvastatin, ramipril, bendroflumethiazide • Annual check up • eGFR 42 • What next?
Chronic Kidney disease or not? • Urinalysis? • Historical blood tests • Symptoms?
Chronic Kidney Disease • CKD-1 • normal GFR (>90) with other evidence of chronic kidney damage • CKD-2 • Mild impairment, GFR 60-89 with other evidence of chronic kidney damage • CKD-3 • Moderate impairment, GFR 30-59 • Divided into 3A 45-59 and 3B 30-44 • CKD-4 • Severe impairment, GFR 15-29 • CKD-5 • Established renal failure, GFR <15 or on dialysis • Note, a patient with GFR 60-89 without other markers does not have CKD and does not need further investigation unless other reasons • Use ‘p’ to indicate proteinuria
Case 1 • Urinalysis protein trace, blood ‘non-hemolysed trace’ • eGFR was 39 last year • No symptoms • BP 146/86 • Refer to nephrology??
Follow up of CKD in primary care NICE CG73
Blood Pressure targets in CKD • KDIGO Clinical Practice Guidelines 2012 • General Statements • Individualize treatment considering age, co-morbidity, risk of progressive CKD, tolerance of treatment • Check for postural symptoms and postural hypotension • Lifestyle measures • BMI 20-25 • Salt • Exercise • alcohol Kidney International 2012; Suppl 2: 337-414
Blood Pressure targets in CKD • CKD, no diabetes • <140/90 • CKD, no diabetes, ACR >30 • <130/80 • CKD plus diabetes, ACR <30 • <140/90 • CKD plus diabetes, ACR >30 • <130/80 • If drug treatment is indicated, use an ACE/ARB in the presence of proteinuria (ACR >30)
Blood Pressure targets in CKD • Diabetes or proteinuria 130/80 • Neither diabetes nor proteinuria 140/90
Blood Pressure targets in CKD • Special situations • Renal Transplants- target <130/80 regardless of ACR or diabetes status • Elderly- tailor the BP regimen considering age, co-morbidities, careful escalation of treatment, side effects and tolerance of treatment
Additional primary care follow up CKD is a vascular risk factor so: Smoking Diet Exercise Lipid-lowering? (SHARP) USS if LUTS or difficult hypertension
Case 1a • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Aspirin, simvastatin, ramipril, bendroflumethiazide • Comes to see you with acute swollen joint? • Pyrexial, BP 106/62, WCC 17 • Management
Case 2 • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Bilateral swollen legs • eGFR 55 • What next?
Case 2 • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Bilateral swollen legs • eGFR 55 • Urinalysis- protein ++++ • What next?
Case 2 • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Bilateral swollen legs • eGFR 55 • Urinalysis- protein ++++ • PCI 5430 • [albumin] 22 • Diagnosis? • Referral ?
Nephrotic Syndrome • Specific definition • Proteinuria (>3g) + hypoalbuminemia + oedema • Can we deduce the diagnosis?
Nephrotic syndrome • Specific definition • Proteinuria (>3g) + hypoalbuminemia + oedema • Can we deduce the diagnosis? • No • Needs a renal biopsy except……….
Nephrotic syndrome in adults • Minimal Change • Focal and Segmental Sclerosis • Membranous Glomerulonephritis • Diabetes • Amyloid • SLE • Other long names
Management of Nephrotic Syndrome • Specific therapy • Steroids +/- immunosuppression • Prednisolone • Cyclophosphamide • MycophenolateMofetil • Tacrolimus • Underlying disease
Management of Nephrotic Syndrome • General Measures • Diuretics • Guided by symptoms and weight, helped by salt and water restriction • BP control • ACE/ARB • Thromboprophylaxis • Lipid lowering? • Protection from specific therapies • Bone protection, antimicrobial prophylaxis, stomach protection
Case 3 • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Aspirin, simvastatin, ramipril, bendroflumethiazide • Annual check up • eGFR 42 • Urinalysis protein trace, blood ++ • What next? • Are you going to refer and who to?
What to you need to consider in Haematuria? • Does it matter if it is visible or not? • Presence of symptoms or not • Proteinuria, blood pressure, eGFR • Features of acute glomerulonephritis • Features of malignancy • Bladder or renal
Joint British Haematuria Guidelines 2008 • Visible or Non-visible • Symptomatic or not • Dipstix based diagnosis, routine microscopy is not indicated from primary care • Haemolysed or non-haemolysed not relevant
Joint British Haematuria Guidelines 2008 • Significant if: • Any episode of VH • Any episode of s-NVH if UTI or other cause excluded • Persistent a-NVH (2 out of 3) • Exclusions • UTI (but remember may need to investigate why) • Exercise-induced haematuria • Menstruation • WARFARIN (and anti-platelets) is IRRELEVANT
Assessment of haematuria • Exclude UTI • Blood pressure • eGFR • proteinuria
Haematuria referral • Urology • All visible haematuria • (possible exception cola urine in <40 with resp symptoms) • All s-NVH • All a-NVH > 40
Nephrology Referral • Evidence of progressive fall in eGFR • Stage 4 or 5 CKD • Proteinuria (PCR >50) • Visible Haematuria with URTI • Isolated haematuria plus HT if <40 • If you don’t refer or if they are sent back • Monitor for LUTS, visible haematuria, proteinuria, eGFR and hypertension • Annual check if NVH persists • THEY HAVE CKD
Case 4 • 76 year old male • Hx of PVD (angioplasty two years ago), hypertension, osteoarthritis • Aspirin, simvastatin, ramipril, bendroflumethiazide • Tired, breathless, poor appetite • eGFR 20, Hb 101, Ca 2-04, • BP 176/94 • Refer or not
Anaemia of CKD • Consider investigation and management if Hb <110 or symptoms attributable to anaemia • MCV, haematinics, other causes of anaemia (CRP, PTH, myeloma) • Offer ESA treatment to people with anaemia of CKD who are likely to benefit in terms of quality of life and physical function NICE CG114
Anaemia of CKD • Target ranges • Hb 100-120 • Do not try to achieve normal Hb • Ferritin 200-500 • And TSAT >20% • Or %hypochromic red cells <6% • Likely to need intravenous iron • Likely to need specialist input
Renal Bone Disease • High phosphate plus low calcium drives hyperparathyroidism • Vitamin D deficiency • Age • Steroid and other therapies
Management of renal bone disease • Dietary phosphate restriction • Phosphate binders • Aluminium hydroxide • Calcium carbonate or acetate • Sevelamer (renagel/renvela) • Lanthanum (fosrenol) • Osvaren (calcium acetate/magnesium carbonate) • Need to be taken correctly and avoid hypercalcemia
Management of renal bone disease • Activated Vitamin D • Alfacalcidol • But dangers of calcification • Unresponsive Hyper-PTH • Surgery • Cinacalcit (mimpara) • Paricalcitol (zemplar) • Always check [Ca] in ‘bloods’ for CKD 4 or 5
Acidosis • Low [bicarbonate] a risk factor for renal bone disease • Possible role in muscle catabolism • Emerging evidence that correction of acidosis delays progression of CKD
Case 5 • 57 year old • MI x 3 previously, turned down for CABG as poor LV function • Ramipril, bumetanide, spironolactone • SOB on minimal exertion, peripheral oedema • Creatinine 243, urea 36 • Diagnosis/what next
Cardiorenal syndrome • Remember the basics, BP, urinalysis, previous creatinines • But this is likely to reflect cardiorenal syndrome • Balancing act of diuretic benefit vs effect on kidney function • Kidneys will benefit if you improve cardiac function but may have to tolerate some oedema • Use the Heart Failure nurses
Case 6 • 64 year old known CKD • eGFR 19 at last renal clinic appointment • Complains of difficulty moving legs and feels awful • Next steps?
Case 6 • 64 year old known CKD • eGFR 19 at last renal clinic appointment • Complains of difficulty moving legs and feels awful • eGFR 9, K+ 7.2 • Treated with antibiotics for UTI last weekend • Which antibiotic?
Case 6 • 64 year old known CKD • eGFR 19 at last renal clinic appointment • Complains of difficulty moving legs and feels awful • eGFR 9, K+ 7.2 • Treated with antibiotics for UTI last weekend • Trimethoprim