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Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD)
NICE guideline [NG203] Chronic kidney disease: assessment and management. Last updated: Nov 2021.
NICE CKS Chronic kidney disease. Last revised: May 2025.
Article Last Updated:22/12/2025
Background information added accordingly, optimisations and improvements were made to the diagnosis and management sections.
Date: 21/12/25
Background Information
Definition
CKD is defined as abnormalities in kidney function and/or structure, that present for at least 3 months
Chronic heart failure (→ cardiorenal syndrome type 2)
Drugs
See section on nephrotoxic drugs below
Nephrotoxic Drugs
“Nephrotoxic drug” is a broad and often misused term. In practice, such drugs can be classified into two main groups: those associated with CKD, and those associated with AKI.
1) CKD-associated drugs are those that can cause intrinsic renal damage with prolonged use / repeated exposure:
NSAIDs
Analgesic nephropathy
Lithium
Calcineurin inhibitors (ciclosporin, tacrolimus)
Cisplatin
Tenofovir disoproxil
Note that although ACE inhibitors / ARBs need to be temporarily stopped in AKI, they are renoprotective in the context of CKD (in fact, used as 1st line management for proteinuria in CKD).
2) AKI-associated drugs. This is often a source of confusion. In practice, AKI-associated drugs can be grouped into 3 distinct categories based on their mechanism.
Drugs that should be withheld in AKI due to accumulation or toxicity risk, rather than direct nephrotoxicity
Metformin (risk of lactic acidosis)
Lithium (risk of lithium toxicity)
Digoxin (risk of digoxin toxicity)
LMWH (risk of bleeding) (change to UFH)
The most exam-relevant “nephrotoxic drugs” to temporarily withhold in the acute setting of AKI:
NSAIDs, ACE inhibitors, ARBs, diuretics (the ones that reduce renal perfusion)
Aminoglycosides, vancomycin (the ones that cause direct tubular toxicity)
LMWH (use UFH instead), metformin, lithium
Drugs associated with acute tubular necrosis can directly cause intrinsic AKI.
In contrast, drugs that cause pre-renal AKI typically impair renal haemodynamics and precipitate AKI in the presence of an additional insult, such as dehydration, sepsis, or hypotension.
Clinical Features
CKD is often asymptomatic in early stages.
Non-Specific Features
The clinical features of CKD itself, independent of the underlying cause, are often non-specific: [Ref]
Generalised fatigue and lethargy
Anorexia and disturbances in taste
Frothy urine (non-specific sign that may indicate proteinuria)
Both the low calcium and high phosphate (from impaired renal excretion) → secondary hyperparathyroidism
Clinically manifest as renal osteodystrophy:
Osteomalacia
Osteosclerosis
Pepper Pot skull
Osteitis fibrosa cystica (pathognomonic but rare – loss of bone mass → peritrabecular fibrosis and formation of cyst-like brown tumours)
Systemic consequences
↑ Risk of cardiovascular disease – leading cause of premature death in CKD patients (risk of MI and stroke increases as GFR declines and albuminuria increases)
↑ Risk of cancer (esp. thyroid and urological cancers)
Cognitive impairment
Diagnosis
Indications for CKD Testing
CKD testing is recommended in adults with any of the following:
Multi-system disease with potential kidney involvement (e.g. SLE)
Hereditary kidney disease / family history of end-stage renal disease
Incidental detection of proteinuria or haematuria
Gout
Test of Choice
If CKD testing is indicated (see above) or suspected, perform ALL the following investigations
Test
Purpose
Serum creatinine and eGFR
eGFR reflects glomerular filtration (i.e. kidney function, indicating how effectively the kidneys filter creatinine)
Urine ACR
ACR quantifies proteinuria (which serves as a marker of structural kidney damage)
Urine dipstick
To check for haematuria
*Do NOT use a urine dipstick to test for proteinuria
Be aware that testing with eGFR and ACR only provides information about whether a patient has CKD or not, without giving information about the underlying cause.
eGFR Measurement
eGFR provides an estimate of the true GFR. NICE recommends using the CKD-EPI equation to calculate eGFR in adults, which incorporates the following variables:
Serum creatinine
Sex
Age
The older MDRD equation, which also included a race adjustment, is no longer used. As race is a social construct, not a biological variable, it often overestimates kidney function in black patients. It also introduces health inequity.
Factors affecting eGFR interpretation:
Factors that ↑ creatinine → falsely low eGFR (underestimated)
Factors that ↓ creatinine → falsely high eGFR (overestimated)
Pregnancy (↑ true GFR as part of physiological change in pregnancy)
Severe liver impairment
Testing for Proteinuria
1st line test: urine ACR
Sample: early morning urine sample
≥3 mg/mmol is defined as clinically important proteinuria
If the initial result is 3-70 mg/mmol → repeat the test
If the initial result is >70 mg/mmol, no repeat is needed
Note that transient elevations of albuminuria can occur with:
Menstrual blood contamination
UTI
Strenuous exercise
Upright posture (orthostatic proteinuria)
Other conditions that increase vascular permeability (e.g. sepsis)
Therefore, it is important to repeat the urine ACR, if results are <70 mg/mmol to confirm if the albuminuria is transient (likely the listed causes here) or persistent (likely due to CKD).
Do NOT rely on urine reagent strips (dipsticks) to diagnose proteinuria, as they are insensitive and unreliable, particularly for low-level proteinuria. If urinalysis is +ve for protein (often an incidental finding), confirm with a urine ACR test.
Urine ACR is preferred over PCR to test for proteinuria, as it is more sensitive for low levels of proteinuria. PCR should only be used as an alternative to ACR if ACR is ≥70 mg/mmol (where it is able to provide adequate quantification).
Haematuria Testing
If a urine dipstick shows 1+ or more blood on the dipstick:
Arrange an MSU for MC&S to exclude a UTI
If there is persistent haematuria → consider the possibility of urological malignancy (see Bladder Cancer and Renal Cancer articles for more information)
Diagnostic Criteria
CKD can only be diagnosed if ANY of the following (right column) are present for at least 3 months
eGFR
eGFR <60 mL/min/1.73m2 on 2 occasions separated by at least 90 days
Markers of kidney damage
Urinary ACR >3 mg/mmol
Abnormalities on histology
Structural abnormalities on imaging
History of kidney transplantation
Electrolyte or other abnormalities (e.g. acidosis) due to tubular disorders
Urine sediment abnormalities
Investigating the Cause of CKD
The selection of additional tests to investigate the underlying cause should be individualised based on the clinical context and working diagnosis.
Laboratory Testing
A standard panel would include:
Serum electrolytes
HbA1c
Lipid panel
Serological testing guided by clinical suspicion (e.g. ANA, complement levels, Hep B and C serology, ANCA, anti-GBM etc.)
>20 y/o with family history of polycystic kidney disease
eGFR <30 (G4 or G5)
Renal biopsy needed
Classic ultrasound findings in CKD:
Bilaterally small kidneys + increased echogenicity suggest long-standing CKD
Asymmetrically small kidneys suggest renal artery stenosis
However, some causes of CKD are associated with preserved or enlarged kidney size despite long-standing disease: [Ref1][Ref2]
Diabetic nephropathy (due to mesangial expansion)
Polycystic kidney disease and other cystic kidney diseases (e.g. medullary cystic disease)
Amyloidosis, multiple myeloma and other infiltrative diseases (due to deposition of abnormal proteins or cells)
HIV-associated nephropathy (due to interstitial inflammation)
Chronic obstructive uropathy
However, note that advanced scarring from chronic injury can still cause kidney atrophy.
CKD Classification
CKD Staging
CKD staging based on eGFR:
CKD stage
Criteria
1
eGFR >90 + marker of kidney damage
2
eGFR 60-89 + marker of kidney damage
3a
eGFR 45-59
3b
eGFR 30-44
4
eGFR 15-29
5 (end-stage renal disease)
eGFR <15
Although the reference range of CKD is often listed as >90, an eGFR of 60-89 alone does NOT constitute CKD
While eGFR <60 alone (on 2 separate occasions and for at least 3 months) is enough to constitute CKD
For someone to have CKD that has an eGFR of >60, they must have an additional marker of kidney damage
CKD Risk Stratification
NICE recommends stratifying the risk of progression and complications of CKD based on BOTH eGFR and ACR
A1 (ACR <3)
A2 (ACR 3-30)
A3 (ACR >30)
G1 (eGFR ≥90)
Low risk
*There is no CKD if there are no other markers of kidney damage
Moderate risk
High risk
G2 (eGFR 60-89)
G3a (eGFR 45-59)
Moderate risk
High risk
Very high risk
G3b (eGFR 30-44)
High risk
Very high risk
G4 (eGFR 15-29)
Very high risk
G5 (eGFR <15)
Modern CKD classification incorporates both eGFR and ACR because they provide complementary prognostic information. Albuminuria is independently associated with faster CKD progression and increased cardiovascular risk, even when eGFR is preserved.
Classifying CKD using both parameters, therefore provides superior prognostic accuracy than eGFR alone.
Management
It is essential to identify and treat (or optimise the treatment of) the underlying cause of CKD. The management principles outlined below apply to the non-specific management of CKD, regardless of aetiology.
Risk Assessment and Referral Criteria
Assess 5-year risk of needing RRT with the 4-variable Kidney Failure Risk Equation
Refer adults with CKD for specialist assessment if any of the following:
5-year risk of needing RRT >5%
ACR ≥70 mg/mmol (unless caused by diabetes and already appropriately treated)
ACR ≥30 mg/mmol + haematuria
Accelerated progression of CKD
Suspected renal artery stenosis
Known / suspected rare or genetic cause of CKD
Monitoring Disease Progression
Monitor CKD progression with eGFR and urine ACR
Tests to monitor potential CKD complications:
FBC to exclude anaemia of CKD in CKD stage 3-5, or if clinically indicated
Calcium, phosphate and PTH levels should be routinely measured in CKD stage 4 and 5 (but not routinely in stage 1-3) to check for CKD-MBD
Conservative / General Management
Lifestyle advice is very personalised in CKD, depending on various factors (e.g. polyuric or oligouric, electrolyte levels, fluid status).
Some key lifestyle advice:
Regulate protein intake (usually ~0.8g per kg per day)
Usually advised by dietitian
Do NOT routinely recommend a low-protein diet
Limit sodium intake
Some situational advice (usually only advised if there is a problem)
Fluid restriction
Low phosphate diet
Low potassium diet
Pharmacological Management
There are 3 main aspects of CKD management (irrespective of underlying cause):
Add SGLT-2 inhibitor in addition to ACE inhibitor / ARB if
eGFR 20-45, or
eGFR 45-90 + T2DM / urine ACR ≥22.6
The exact indications outlined by NICE are often not strictly adhered to in practice. All patients with CKD are typically started on an ACE inhibitor / ARB (unless contraindicated). It is more important to be aware that both ACE inhibitors (or ARB) and SGLT-2 inhibitors are used to treat proteinuria in CKD, than learning the exact indications outlined by NICE.
CVD Secondary Prevention
CKD alone is an indication for statin therapy (primary prevention):
1st line: atorvastatin 20mg
NICE recommends atorvastatin 20mg for both primary and secondary prevention in CKD.
Management of CKD Complications
The following outlines the key complications of CKD that are amenable to treatment or require specific management strategies.
Otherwise, the risk of other complications is best reduced by optimising the management of CKD itself and any underlying causes.
Anaemia of CKD
Investigation and Diagnosis
Test of choice: FBC to exclude iron deficiency
There is no specific test that definitively confirms anaemia of CKD, it is diagnosed by excluding other causes of anaemia in conjunction with the clinical context
Be aware that anaemia of CKD is unlikely if eGFR >60, but very likely if eGFR <30
Management
First, correct any iron deficiency (if present)
High-dose IV iron is necessary for those with stage 5 CKD on haemodialysis
If there is persistent anaemia, despite correction of reversible causes / iron deficiency:
Although inexpensive and effective, calcium-based phosphate binders (e.g. calcium acetate, calcium carbonate) carry a significant risk of hypercalcaemia and accelerated vascular calcification.
Non-calcium binders (e.g. sevelamer carbonate, sucroferric oxyhydroxide, lanthanum carbonate) are associated with a lower risk of these complications, therefore preferred in patients with hypercalcaemia, vascular calcification, or related comorbidities.
Vitamin D Deficiency
Testing
Vitamin D should only be measured if deficiency is suspected
Routine serum vitamin D testing is NOT indicated in CKD
Management
1st line (any CKD stage): standard oral vitamin D supplementation (cholecaliferol or ergocalciferol)
Active vitamin D (alfacalcidol / calcitriol) should only be offered if: