Gentamicin charted for a 74-year-old with creatinine 180 µmol/L. Standard dose on the chart looks like it was written for a 30-year-old. You need the CrCl and the dose adjustment guidance before the nurse gives it.
CrCl ≥50: 100% · CrCl 30–49: 75% · CrCl 15–29: 50% · CrCl <15: 25%
Interval extension factors:
CrCl ≥50: ×1 · CrCl 30–49: ×1.5 · CrCl 15–29: ×2 · CrCl <15: ×3
1 What this calculator does
Converts creatinine clearance (CrCl) to a renal function category and provides standardised dose adjustment guidance thresholds. Used alongside the CrCl calculator to determine whether a dose reduction, dose interval extension, or avoidance is required for renally cleared medications.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Mild impairment: CrCl 60–89 mL/min — review required for some drugs
Moderate impairment: CrCl 30–59 mL/min — dose reduction for most renally cleared drugs
Severe impairment: CrCl 15–29 mL/min — significant dose reduction; many drugs contraindicated
Kidney failure: CrCl < 15 mL/min — specialist pharmacist review; most drugs require major adjustment
Most drugs require dose adjustment when CrCl falls below a drug-specific threshold — typically 60 or 30 mL/min for commonly encountered drugs. The adjustment approach depends on the drug: (1) dose reduction (same frequency, lower dose — used for drugs with concentration-dependent toxicity), (2) interval extension (same dose, less frequent — used for time-dependent antimicrobials), or (3) avoidance (drug is contraindicated in renal impairment). This calculator provides the category; drug-specific adjustment must be obtained from AMH or Micromedex.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
72 mL/min → mild impairment28 mL/min → severe impairment55 → moderate · 38 → moderate · 22 → severe4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Using eGFR from the lab report instead of Cockcroft-Gault CrCl | eGFR is prominently displayed on lab reports | Dose adjustment error — can differ by 20–40% in elderly, obese or very thin patients | Always calculate Cockcroft-Gault CrCl for dose adjustment. The eGFR on lab forms is not validated for this purpose. |
| Not reassessing on CrCl change | Setting a dose adjustment once and not reviewing | Dose that was appropriate at CrCl 45 mL/min is dangerous when CrCl falls to 20 mL/min | Review all renally adjusted medications whenever CrCl changes by more than 25% or crosses a drug-specific threshold |
| Using fixed dose reduction without considering dosing method | Applying a single reduction factor to all drugs | Wrong adjustment strategy — some drugs need interval extension, not dose reduction | Check AMH for each drug. Aminoglycosides: extend interval. Beta-lactams: reduce dose or extend interval. Vancomycin: reduce dose. |
| Not considering dialysis when CrCl < 15 mL/min | Using the same adjustment thresholds | Drugs may be partially dialysed — suppl doses needed post-dialysis | Patients on dialysis need specialist pharmacist review for every renally adjusted medication. Dialysis clearance varies by drug and dialysis type. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
Common tools used alongside this one: