Winnipeg researcher makes predicting kidney failure easy with simple equation - Action News
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Manitoba

Winnipeg researcher makes predicting kidney failure easy with simple equation

A prestigious medical journal is recognizing a Winnipeg-based researcher's work to give health-care professionals and people with kidney disease a better idea of their risk of kidney failure.

Equation for kidney failure prediction praised in prestigious medical journal

Winnipeg researcher Dr. Navdeep Tangri says a new study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association shows an equation he devised for predicting kidney failure is reliable for populations around the world. (The Associated Press)

A Winnipegresearcher's work on an equation that could give patients and health-care professionalsa better idea of therisk of kidney failurehas been publishedin a prestigious peer-reviewedmedical journal.

Dr. Navdeep Tangri hopes the publication of the studyin theJournal of the AmericanMedical Associationon Tuesday will bring more widespread use of his equation, which he says reliably predicts kidney failure in patients regardless of location, gender, age and general health status.

Thestudy published Tuesday looks at healthinformation from roughly 700,000 kidney disease research patients from 30 countriesacross the world. It expands on workTangri, a doctor and researcher at Seven Oaks General Hospital and one of the study authors,did earlier with Canadian health data.

Tangri,who is also an associate professor in the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Manitoba, first devised in 2011 aneasy,reliablewayto predictthe likelihood that any patientwith chronic kidney disease would laterdevelop kidney failure.

Hisequation takes four variablesapatient's age and gender, their level of kidney function and the amount of protein found in their urineand spits out answers about a patient's risk of kidney failure in the next two orfive years.
Dr. Navdeep Tangri is a medical researcher at Seven Oaks General Hospital and an associate professor in the University of Manitoba Faculty of Medicine. (Seven Oaks General Hospital)

Tangrisaid he developed it because he wanted to find a way to help provide stressrelief for kidney disease patients.

"Too many times I sat as a doctor in the clinic and saw that the patient across from me, the biggest thing that was making them anxious was the fear of dialysis, and the doctor across from them was unable to give them any precise idea of what the patient's actual risk was,"he said.

"The patients were very pessimistic or overly worried about their risk, [so] that if I could just tell them precisely what their risk is, it would result in significant relief and loss of anxiety."

Elegant equation

Tangrifelthe did just that almost five years ago when he first published his equation.

But the beautifulsimplicity of an equation doesn't ensure its success or widespread use. He and his collaborators recognized that if they couldn't make the equation easy for family doctors to use, it would never take off.

What 2016 and onwards is about is getting primary care doctors, family doctors across the continent and across the world, to use the equation.- Dr. NavdeepTangri

They designedsmartphoneand computerapps, as well as an online calculator, to help encourage health-care professionals to use the equation. It's been in use inManitoba and each provinceeast to New Brunswick since 2011, but there have been critics and holdouts.

Data used inTangri's first study was fromCanadian research participants. Hereceived pushback from peers in the international research community,who saidthe original study was limited in scope and might not apply to all kidney diseasepatientsoverseas.

Tangribelieves he's put those criticisms to rest with the publication of the followup study.

"We showed the equation is highly accurate across the board," hesaid.

Things that vary from place to place, such as environmental pressures and health challenges, didn't change how effective the equation was at predicting kidney failure in patients in the new study, he said.

"It really allows me to say to any physician, in almost any part of the world out there that this equation is accurate and valid in their country for their patient," he said, adding it's accurate regardless of where patients live, their age andsex, environmental pressures orother chronic illnesses.

What is kidney disease?

Left: a healthy kidney. Right: a diseased kidney. (Seven Oaks General Hospital)
About 3.1 million Canadian adults have kidney disease, which has to do with the way the body processes waste.

Bloodis full of protein. The kidneys act as a "sieve,"Tangrisaid, filtering waste and leavinggood proteins in the blood.

When kidneys get damaged, a result of health issues such as diabetes or high blood pressure, "they become leaky,"Tangrisaid. The greater the damage, the faster the progression of kidney disease, he added.

Options for patients experiencing kidney failureare limited to dialysis or a transplant.

Only about the sickest 10 to 20 per cent of kidney disease patients around the world see specialists for treatment. The other 80 to 90 per centare seen by family doctors, Tangri said.

"What 2016 and onwards is about is getting primary care doctors, family doctors across the continent and across the worldto use [the equation]," he said.

His hope is that the clout and exposure brought to his study by publication in JAMA, along with the relatively user-friendly nature of theappsand online tools, will influencemore family doctors to use his equation to clarify what patients are up against.

"Now we have so much evidence that this is accurate in all stages of kidney disease, that it's really time to get the push into primary care."

More information about how the equationcalculateskidney failure riskis available here.