Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a primary-care staple, but NICE NG203 covers dozens of decisions. Here’s the distilled version clinicians look up most often.

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1) Diagnosing CKD

CKD is diagnosed when either:

  • eGFR < 60 for ≥ 3 months, or
  • ACR > 3 mg/mmol (A2+) for ≥ 3 months.

Key reminders:

  • Use creatinine-based eGFR and confirm new findings with repeat testing.
  • Adjust interpretation for extremes of muscle mass and pregnancy.
  • Do not diagnose CKD on a single reduced eGFR unless life-threatening pathology is suspected.

2) GFR categories (G1–G5)

  • G1: ≥ 90
  • G2: 60–89
  • G3a: 45–59
  • G3b: 30–44
  • G4: 15–29
  • G5: < 15

Combine GFR category with albuminuria to determine risk and monitoring frequency.

3) Albuminuria categories (A1–A3)

  • A1: <3
  • A2: 3–30
  • A3: >30

Albuminuria often carries more prognostic weight than eGFR alone.

4) Monitoring frequency by risk

Risk level ACR eGFR Monitoring
Low A1 G1–G2 Annual
Moderate A2 G3 1–2× per year
High A3 G3b–G4 2–4× per year

5) When to start ACE-I / ARB

Offer ACE-I/ARB to:

  • Diabetes with ACR ≥ 3.
  • Hypertension with ACR ≥ 30.
  • Anyone with ACR ≥ 70, regardless of diabetes or blood pressure.

6) Referral to nephrology

  • Declining eGFR (>5 ml/min/yr) or sustained drop ≥25%.
  • A3 (>70) albuminuria.
  • G4–G5 CKD.
  • Suspected rare/genetic/rapidly progressive disease.
  • Resistant hypertension.

7) Medication and safety

  • Review nephrotoxins (NSAIDs, lithium, contrast).
  • Consider SGLT2 inhibitors for diabetes + CKD.
  • Adjust DOAC and antibiotic doses by eGFR.

If you need a specialty-specific view (e.g., diabetes, cardiology, or local nephrology thresholds), let us know and we’ll add it.