To assess your kidney function if you have known or suspected kidney disease, but only in specific circumstances when traditional kidney function tests are misleading. It is used to calculate how well your kidneys are able to filter waste products from the blood.
Cystatin C
When your doctor suspects that you may have decreased kidney function but blood creatinine measurements are not reliable because of circumstances specific to you. It may be measured at intervals over a longer time to monitor your kidney function.
A blood sample taken from a vein in your arm
None
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How is it used?
Cystatin C may be used as an alternative to creatinine to look for and monitor kidney dysfunction in people with known or suspected kidney diseases. It is most useful in situations where creatinine measurement could be misleading: for instance in those who have liver cirrhosis, are very muscular, obese, malnourished or have a very small muscle mass (elderly, children or people with amputated limbs).
It can be useful in the early detection of chronic kidney disease (CKD), when other test results may still be normal and an affected person has few, if any, symptoms. There is some research suggesting that cystatin C returns to normal much more quickly than creatinine and could be used to assess kidney function in critically ill patients recovering in hospital.
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When is it requested?
Blood creatinine is the most commonly used test of kidney function. Cystatin C can be used if measurement of creatinine is likely to be misleading. It may be requested when you have a known or suspected disorder that affects kidney function, even if you have no symptoms. It may also be requested if your kidney function is found to be borderline using the more readily available creatinine test. Your doctor may request cystatin C to check for early kidney disease and/or to monitor known impairment over time. It may be requested by itself or be done along with other tests such as urine microalbumin.
In the UK, the National Institute for Health and Care excellence (NICE) recommends testing people if their estimated GFR based on measurement of blood creatinine is borderline low and they have no other evidence of kidney disease. If the estimated GFR is normal using cystatin C, further monitoring for kidney disease is not usually required.
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What does the test result mean?
A high blood concentration of cystatin C indicates a low GFR and hence decreased filtration of waste products from the blood by the kidneys. Research suggests that it may also indicate an increased risk of heart disease, heart failure, stroke, and mortality.
Since cystatin C is produced throughout the body at a constant rate and removed and broken down by the kidneys, it remains at a steady concentration in the blood if the kidneys are working efficiently and the GFR is normal.
Concentrations of cystatin C vary little with sex, age or race and are not affected by most drugs, infections or diet. However, they may be increased by steroid medication, smoking and inflammation.
Rarely, cystatin C concentrations may be high because of increased production by cancer cells or an overactive thyroid gland, even if kidney function is normal.
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Is there anything else I should know?
Cystatin C measurement has not been widely available in the past. However, it is now recommended by NICE for use when the more commonly available tests are not reliable enough, so is likely to become more frequently used in the future.
Cystatin C test results are usually reported both as the measured concentration in the blood and as a calculated estimate of kidney function (GFR).
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Can cystatin C be measured in my urine?
Yes. Very rarely, and usually in research settings, cystatin C may be measured in urine to assess the function of the kidney tubules. If these are not able to reabsorb the proteins and other substances that are normally filtered by the glomeruli, cystatin C passes into the urine. This is known as tubular proteinuria. Cystatin C is not found in the urine of healthy people.
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How is an estimated GFR (eGFR) calculated?
The equation recommended by NICE for calculating the eGFR, is called the CKD-EPI equation. It uses a person’s serum creatinine, age, gender and race for the calculation.
The CKD-EPI equation has variants that use creatinine alone, cystatin C alone, or a combination of both values.