Nephrology · Clinical Calculator · eGFR

eGFR Calculator CKD-EPI 2021 Creatinine–Cystatin C

Enter age, sex, serum creatinine, and cystatin C to estimate glomerular filtration rate using the 2021 race-free combined equation — the most accurate single-lab eGFR estimate available for adults.

Published: References: 2 Read time:

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Instructions
  1. Select creatinine units (mg/dL or µmol/L) to match your lab report. Switching units clears the creatinine field.
  2. Enter the patient's age in whole years (18–110) and select sex. Race is not required.
  3. Enter serum creatinine from the most recent blood draw.
  4. Enter cystatin C in mg/L. Normal range is approximately 0.5–1.0 mg/L; values above 1.0 suggest reduced GFR.
  5. Results update automatically: combined eGFR (mL/min/1.73 m²), KDIGO CKD stage, a plain-language interpretation, and a stage-specific action recommendation.

All computation runs in your browser; no values are stored or transmitted.

When to Use

Use the CKD-EPI 2021 creatinine–cystatin C equation whenever you need the most accurate eGFR from routine bloodwork in an adult (age ≥18). Combining two independent filtration markers substantially reduces the error that affects each marker alone. This calculator is particularly valuable when creatinine-only eGFR is suspected to be unreliable.

Best situations to use this combined equation

  • Adults with unusually high or low muscle mass: very muscular athletes, bodybuilders, sarcopenic or frail elderly, amputees
  • Patients with neuromuscular diseases, prolonged immobility, or severe malnutrition — conditions where creatinine production is atypically low
  • Confirming a borderline creatinine-only eGFR (e.g., 58–72 mL/min) before a CKD diagnosis is assigned
  • Pre-transplant donor or recipient evaluation requiring the most accurate GFR estimate short of a measured GFR
  • Any setting where race-based correction is not desired — the 2021 equation is fully race-free
⚠️

When NOT to use this calculator

Do not apply in acute kidney injury (AKI) — both creatinine and cystatin C lag behind rapidly changing GFR and will systematically underestimate true function. Do not use in children under 18; use the CKiD U25 equation for ages 1–25 instead. A single eGFR value, no matter how accurate, cannot establish CKD — KDIGO requires evidence of structural or functional abnormality persisting for more than three months.

Pearls & Pitfalls
💡

Use the combined equation when creatinine is unreliable

When muscle mass deviates significantly from average — sarcopenic elderly, amputees, bodybuilders, or patients with neuromuscular disease — the combined creatinine + cystatin C eGFR is substantially more accurate than creatinine alone. Adding cystatin C to the workup costs little and eliminates much of the ambiguity in borderline GFR estimates.

🔬

Cystatin C can be elevated for non-renal reasons

High-dose corticosteroids increase cystatin C production independently of GFR, causing the equation to overestimate renal impairment. Hyperthyroidism also raises cystatin C. When a patient is on systemic steroids or has thyroid disease, interpret the combined eGFR cautiously and consider measured GFR if precision matters.

🚫

Pitfalls

(1) Neither creatinine nor cystatin C tracks acute changes in GFR quickly — both lag by 24–48 hours during AKI or rapid recovery. In AKI, use clinical judgement and serial trends, not eGFR equations. (2) A single eGFR, however accurate, cannot establish CKD — KDIGO requires abnormalities to persist for more than 3 months. (3) Cystatin C assays must be calibrated to the international IFCC reference material (ERM-DA471/IFCC) for the 2021 equation to apply; older assays may produce systematically different values.

Why Use It

Creatinine is generated by muscle breakdown at a fairly constant rate, making it a reasonable filtration marker in average adults. However, its production varies widely with muscle mass, dietary protein, and certain medications — so creatinine alone can overestimate GFR in highly muscular individuals and underestimate it in the sarcopenic or malnourished.

Cystatin C is produced at a constant rate by all nucleated cells regardless of muscle mass, making it a more reliable filtration marker in extremes of body composition. Its main limitation is that its production is elevated by corticosteroids, thyroid dysfunction, and malignancy — factors that can cause it to overestimate renal impairment.

The CKD-EPI 2021 combined equation exploits the strengths of both markers while partially canceling out each one's weaknesses. In the NEJM 2021 derivation and validation study, the combined equation had a mean bias of approximately 0 mL/min/1.73 m² and the tightest P30 accuracy (percentage of estimates within 30% of measured GFR) of any equation tested — outperforming creatinine alone and cystatin C alone across all race groups when race was not included as a variable.

eGFR — CKD-EPI 2021 Creatinine–Cystatin C

Enter the patient's age, sex, serum creatinine, and cystatin C to compute the combined eGFR and CKD stage. Race is not used in this equation.

Creatinine Units:
Validated in adults (≥18 years)
Race is not used in the 2021 equation
Normal: ~0.6–1.3 mg/dL. Toggle units above if your lab reports µmol/L.
Normal: ~0.5–1.0 mg/L. A blood test independent of muscle mass.
eGFR (cr-cys)
mL/min/1.73m²
CKD Stage

⚕ Estimate only — interpret in full clinical context. Equation: Inker LA, Eneanya ND, Coresh J, et al. New Creatinine- and Cystatin C–Based Equations to Estimate GFR without Race. N Engl J Med 2021;385:1737–1749. eGFR requires ≥3 months of stability to define chronic CKD; a single value is not a diagnosis. Discuss results with your physician.

Next Steps

Use the result to support — not replace — clinical judgment.

  • Interpret the value against the targets shown in the calculator and the Evidence section below, in the context of the full clinical picture.
  • Trend serial measurements rather than acting on a single result; confirm abnormal or unexpected values before changing management.
  • Apply the relevant KDIGO / specialty-guideline threshold and document the indication.
  • Escalate or refer to nephrology when results are out of range, rapidly changing, or discordant with the clinical picture — and discuss the implications with the patient.
Evidence & References

Formula & Equations

The CKD-EPI 2021 creatinine–cystatin C equation (race-free) is:

ComponentValue / Expression
Full equationeGFR = 135 × min(Scr/κ, 1)α × max(Scr/κ, 1)−0.544 × min(CysC/0.8, 1)−0.323 × max(CysC/0.8, 1)−0.778 × 0.9961Age × (0.963 if female)
κ (kappa)0.7 for females; 0.9 for males
α (alpha)−0.219 for females; −0.144 for males
Creatinine unitsmg/dL (µmol/L ÷ 88.4 to convert)
Cystatin C unitsmg/L
Race coefficientNot included (race-free, 2021 revision)

KDIGO CKD Stage Reference

StageeGFR (mL/min/1.73 m²)Description
G1≥90Normal or high — CKD only if kidney damage markers present ≥3 months
G260–89Mildly decreased — CKD only if kidney damage markers present ≥3 months
G3a45–59Mild-to-moderate decrease
G3b30–44Moderate-to-severe decrease
G415–29Severely decreased — prepare for kidney replacement therapy
G5<15Kidney failure

Evidence & References

The CKD-EPI 2021 creatinine–cystatin C equation was derived and validated in a pooled analysis of 12 studies involving 5,017 participants with measured GFR. The combined equation achieved the highest overall accuracy (P30 = 85–91%) across subgroups defined by race, sex, age, and diabetes status — outperforming both single-marker equations. The 2021 update removed race as a variable following evidence that the race coefficient reflected structural inequity in health-care access rather than a true biological difference in creatinine generation.

  1. Inker LA, Eneanya ND, Coresh J, et al. New Creatinine- and Cystatin C–Based Equations to Estimate GFR without Race. N Engl J Med. 2021;385(19):1737–1749.
  2. Kidney Disease: Improving Global Outcomes (KDIGO) CKD Work Group. KDIGO 2024 Clinical Practice Guideline for the Evaluation and Management of Chronic Kidney Disease. Kidney Int. 2024.
  3. Levey AS, Stevens LA, Schmid CH, et al. A new equation to estimate glomerular filtration rate. Ann Intern Med. 2009;150(9):604–612. [Original CKD-EPI creatinine equation]
  4. Grubb A, Blirup-Jensen S, Lindstrom V, et al. First certified reference material for cystatin C in human serum. Clin Chem Lab Med. 2010;48(11):1619–1621.
Important: This calculator is an educational aid and does not replace individualized clinical assessment. eGFR is an estimate, not a measured value. CKD staging, treatment decisions, and medication dosing adjustments must be made in consultation with a qualified physician or nephrologist.

Use this with

References 2 sources
  1. Inker LA et al. NEJM 2021
  2. KDIGO 2024 CKD Guidelines
Dr. W Rivero, MD

W Rivero, MD, FPCP, DPSN

Specialist in Internal Medicine, Nephrology, and Clinical Nutrition. Practicing integrative and evidence-based nephrology across Quezon City, Pampanga, and Bulacan.

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