Sandhu Geeta, Adattini Josephine, Gordon Evangeline Armstrong, O'Neill Niamh, Bagnis Corrine, Chambers Pinkie, Martin Jennifer H, Flynn Alex, Ibrahim Karim, Jardine Meg J, Johnson David W, Jones Graham R D, Karapetis Christos S, Kelly Aisling, Kichenadasse Ganessan, Kliman David S, Liauw Winston, Lucas Catherine, Mallett Andrew J, Malyszko Jolanta, Michael Michael, Pollock Carol A, Roberts Darren M, Rosner Mitchell H, Routledge David J M, Scuderi Carla, Shingleton Julia, Shortt Jake, Siderov Jim, Sprangers Ben, Stein Brian N, Tunnicliffe David J, Webber Kate, Ward Robyn L
Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW, Australia.
eviQ, Cancer Institute NSW, St Leonards, NSW, Australia.
EClinicalMedicine. 2025 Mar 25;82:103102. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2025.103102. eCollection 2025 Apr.
The kidney disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) guideline recommends assessing kidney function using glomerular filtration rate (GFR) either through direct measurement or through estimation (eGFR) and describes a standardised classification of reduced kidney function. KDIGO guidelines have been adopted by most internal medicine specialities for the assessment and classification of kidney function, but not by cancer medicine. The development of the International Consensus Guideline on Anticancer Drug Dosing in Kidney Dysfunction (ADDIKD) aims to overcome the perceived challenges with KDIGO recommendations by describing their utility in patients with cancer. Two virtual, consensus building workshops were held consecutively, involving international, multidisciplinary participants (Part 1 of ADDIKD development). During these workshops, three consensus recommendations were agreed upon based on KDIGO's principles; to standardise kidney function assessment, classify kidney function, and determine a uniform approach to dose anticancer drugs in patients with reduced kidney function. Cancer clinicians attending the workshops identified issues regarding the adoption of KDIGO's recommendations. These issues were addressed by nephrologists, clinical pharmacologists, and other clinicians with extensive experience in the contemporary assessment of kidney function. The key concern for cancer specialists was a hesitancy to move away from the familiar and long-standing practice of using the Cockcroft-Gault equation to estimate creatinine clearance. The consensus building within the two multidisciplinary workshops allowed a thorough assessment of the evidence and clarified how directly measured GFR and eGFR, rather than creatinine clearance, could be optimally utilised in cancer care. The development of Part 1 of the ADDIKD guideline represents a standardised, contemporary approach to the assessment, classification, and utility of kidney function in the setting of cancer care and it harmonises with the approach used in other areas of medicine internationally.
Development of the ADDIKD guideline is funded by the Cancer Institute NSW as part of the NSW Government and received no funding from external commercial sources.
《改善全球肾脏病预后(KDIGO)指南》建议通过直接测量或估算(估算肾小球滤过率,eGFR)来评估肾小球滤过率(GFR),以此来评估肾功能,并描述了肾功能降低的标准化分类。KDIGO指南已被大多数内科专科用于肾功能的评估和分类,但肿瘤医学领域尚未采用。《国际肾功能不全患者抗癌药物剂量共识指南》(ADDIKD)的制定旨在通过描述其在癌症患者中的实用性,克服KDIGO建议所面临的挑战。连续举办了两次虚拟的共识达成研讨会,有国际多学科参与者参加(ADDIKD制定的第1部分)。在这些研讨会上,基于KDIGO的原则达成了三项共识建议:标准化肾功能评估、对肾功能进行分类以及确定肾功能降低患者使用抗癌药物的统一方法。参加研讨会的肿瘤临床医生指出了采用KDIGO建议时存在的问题。肾脏科医生、临床药理学家以及其他在当代肾功能评估方面有丰富经验的临床医生解决了这些问题。肿瘤专家的主要担忧是不愿放弃使用Cockcroft - Gault方程估算肌酐清除率这种熟悉且长期使用的做法。这两次多学科研讨会达成的共识使得能够全面评估证据,并阐明了如何在癌症治疗中最佳地利用直接测量的GFR和eGFR,而不是肌酐清除率。ADDIKD指南第1部分的制定代表了一种标准化的当代方法,用于癌症治疗中肾功能评估、分类及应用,并且与国际上其他医学领域所采用的方法相协调。
ADDIKD指南的制定由新南威尔士州癌症研究所作为新南威尔士州政府的一部分提供资金,未接受外部商业来源的资金。