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Significance Statement Risk calculators are widely used to predict kidney failure in people with CKD. These tools represent major advances compared with reporting eGFR alone because they provide objective risk assessment. These calculators are based on analysis methods that censor for death, which may result in overestimation of the risk of kidney failure. By analyzing data on a large population of patients with stage 4 CKD, the authors show that kidney failure risk estimates that censor for death consistently exceed the estimates from analyses that treat death as a competing risk, by 1%–27% at 5 years. Risk overestimation with methods that censor for death increases over time and is higher in people with more comorbidities. Not treating death as a competing risk in the risk calculator leads to overestimates of the risk of kidney failure in people with stage 4 CKD, which could have negative psychological effects on patients or contribute to overtreatment. Background Most kidney failure risk calculators are based on methods that censor for death. Because mortality is high in people with severe, nondialysis-dependent CKD, censoring for death may overestimate their risk of kidney failure. Methods Using 2002–2014 population-based laboratory and administrative data for adults with stage 4 CKD in Alberta, Canada, we analyzed the time to the earliest of kidney failure, death, or censoring, using methods that censor for death and methods that treat death as a competing event factoring in age, sex, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, eGFR, and albuminuria. Stage 4 CKD was defined as a sustained eGFR of 15–30 ml/min per 1.73 m 2 . Results Of the 30,801 participants (106,447 patient-years at risk; mean age 77 years), 18% developed kidney failure and 53% died. The observed risk of the combined end point of death or kidney failure was 64% at 5 years and 87% at 10 years. By comparison, standard risk calculators that censored for death estimated these risks to be 76% at 5 years and >100% at 7.5 years. Censoring for death increasingly overestimated the risk of kidney failure over time from 7% at 5 years to 19% at 10 years, especially in people at higher risk of death. For example, the overestimation of 5-year absolute risk ranged from 1% in a woman without diabetes, cardiovascular disease, or albuminuria and with an eGFR of 25 ml/min per 1.73 m 2 (9% versus 8%), to 27% in a man with diabetes, cardiovascular disease, albuminuria >300 mg/d, and an eGFR of 20 ml/min per 1.73 m 2 (78% versus 51%). Conclusions Kidney failure risk calculators should account for death as a competing risk to increase their accuracy and utility for patients and providers.
Ravani et al. (Fri,) studied this question.