Renal Pharm Flashcards

1
Q

Describe GFR

A
  • gold standard measurement of kidney function
  • requires exogenous substance as a marker
  • eGFR used for staging, transplant list, medication dosing
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2
Q

What does a declined GFR indicate

A
  • disease progression or reversible insult (decreased renal perfusion)

(correlation between loss of nephron function and GFR decrease is not exact)

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3
Q

What substances are typically used as a marker for GFR

A
  • insulin
  • sinistrin
  • lothalamate
  • lohexol
  • radioisotopes
  • Creatinine
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4
Q

Describe how GFR is estimated with creatinine

A
  • 24 hr urine collection (CrCl) or blood draw (SCr)
  • can’t be reliably used alone because serum levels don’t rise until significant destruction of nephrons occurs
  • levels vary greatly over a day
  • today’s SCr reflects yesterdays renal function
  • can’t account for tubular secretion
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5
Q

What things can affect sCr

A
  • extremes in body weight & muscle mass (high)
  • protein consumption (high)
  • malnutrition (low)
  • skeletal muscle disease
  • pregnancy
  • unstable renal function
  • Cr supplements
  • bactrim (TMP-SMX) (temporary)
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6
Q

At what percent of renal elimination will a drug require renal dose adjustment in CKD

A

> 30%

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7
Q

Describe how CKD can affect pharmacokinetics

A
  • delayed gastric motility with DMII, n/v
  • variable fluid status & less protein for binding
  • accumulation of metabolites which may impact metabolism
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8
Q

What are the two main goals of renal dosing regimens

A
  • maintain similar/normal peak/trough
  • maintain average steady-state concentration
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9
Q

when would you want to maintain a similar/peak trough through renal dosing

A
  • with concentration-dependent antimicrobials (aminoglycosides)
  • meds with a narrow therapeutic index/high toxicity risk (digoxin, phenytoin)

Ex.
Usual: amikacin 525mg q8h
adjusted: amikacin 525mg q24-72h
Result: similar peaks & troughs

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10
Q

when would you want to maintain a similar steady-state concentration through renal dosing

A
  • meds without established peak/troughs (BP meds
  • time dependent antimicrobials (beta-lactams)

Ex.
Lisinopril
- normal GFR: no dose adjustment
- reduced GFR: give 50-70% of usual dose
- severely reduced GFR: give 25-50% usual dose
Result: similar steady state concentration

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11
Q

How do you maintain a similar peak/trough in renal dosing?

A

Extend the dosing interval

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12
Q

How do you maintain a similar steady state in renal dosing?

A

Decrease the dose

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13
Q

What are medication considerations if a patient is receiving hemodialysis

A
  • give highly dialyzable meds (low molecular weight, minimal protein binding, hydrophilic) right after dialysis
  • avoid anti-HTN & vasoactive drugs in the hours before dialysis (or skip that day)
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14
Q

Describe the MOA and Effect of ACE/ARBs for proteinuria

A

MOA: vasodilate efferent arteriole by blocking angiotensin II & reducing glomerular pressure

Effect:
- decrease baseline GFR
- decrease proteinuria
- slow disease progression

Pearls: Risk of hyperkalemia, start with low doses in CKD

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15
Q

List some drugs that impair tubular secretion

A
  • SMX-TMP
  • dronedarone
  • cimetidine
  • dolutegravir & cobicistat
  • tyrosine kinase inhibs (imatinab, sunitinib, crizotinib)
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16
Q

List the most nephrotoxic aminoglycosides in order of toxicity & state specifically what they cause

A

gentamicin > tobramycin > amikacin

cause proximal tubular necrosis in 30% of pts treated for 7+ days

17
Q

Describe the nephrotoxicity of vancomycin

A
  • dose dependent
  • avoid with other nephrotoxic drugs
18
Q

Describe the use of insulin in patients with DM and CKD

A
  • insulin renally eliminated
  • can lead to hypoglycemia with worsening renal function
  • start low in pts with CKD
19
Q

Describe the use of metformin in pts with DM and CKD

A
  • accumulation can lead to lactic acidosis
  • safe with high eGFR, monitor with moderate eGFR, contraindicated in low eGFR
20
Q

Describe the use of pain meds in reduced kidney function

A
  • NSAIDs can reduce CrCl and cause renal insufficiency
  • opiates can cause an accumulation of metabolites and lead to CNS/resp depression
  • gabapentin/pregabalin should be renally dosed
21
Q

Describe how lithium interacts with the kidneys

A

kidney does not differentiate between Li+ and Na+
- Li enters epithelial Na channels
- renal retention of Li can occur in dehydration, diarrhea, low sodium intake
- can cause nephrogenic diabetes insipidus & interstitial nephritis (accumulation in collecting tubule cells)

22
Q

Describe the use of Cystatin-C over sCr for GFR

A
  • more accurate (not confounded by muscle, age, diet, ethnicity, sex)
  • more expensive
  • only confounded by thyroid dz, obesity, steroids
23
Q

Which pain meds are contraindicated in decreased kidney function

A
  • NSAIDs
  • codeine
  • tramadol
  • morphine
24
Q

Which pain meds are recommended in decreased kidney function

A
  • APAP
  • hydromorphone
  • fentanyl
  • methadone
  • gabapentin