Interpretation
Cockcroft-Gault CrCl in mL/min = [(140 – age) × (weight in kg) / (72 × serum creatinine in mg/dL)] × (0.85 if female)
The Cockcroft–Gault (C–G) equation was derived in 1976 to estimate creatinine clearance (CrCl) from serum creatinine in adults, using age and weight, with a sex adjustment (multiply by 0.85 for women); it was developed from predominantly male inpatients with measured 24‑h CrCl and became widely used for drug dosing
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK544228/
A historical deconstruction notes methodological issues in the original derivation (e.g., circularity introducing weight), yet acknowledges the equation’s entrenched clinical role for bedside dosing decisions
https://nzmj.org.nz/media/pages/journal/vol-125-no-1350/the-cockroft-and-gault-formula-for-estimation-of-creatinine-clearance-a-friendly-deconstruction/945379baeb-1696472177/the-cockroft-and-gault-formula-for-estimation-of-creatinine-clearance-a-friendly-deconstruction.pdf
Compared with measured clearance, C–G shows only moderate correlation in hospitalized older adults and may misestimate kidney function, particularly in elderly women and at extremes of body size; careful weight selection and awareness of bias are needed
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC8554604/
For general CKD assessment, CKD‑EPI equations often outperform C–G and MDRD; in drug dosing contexts, some studies show CKD‑EPI better correlates with actual drug clearance (e.g., ganciclovir), though clinical differences can be small and regulators/labels may still specify C–G
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6089827/