Nephrology · Clinical Calculator · Geriatric Nephrology

Charlson Comorbidity Index Age-Adjusted Prognosis & Goals-of-Care Tool

Enter the patient's age and comorbidities to compute the age-adjusted Charlson Comorbidity Index and an estimated 10-year survival — a validated foundation for goals-of-care and dialysis benefit-versus-burden discussions in elderly patients with CKD or ESKD.

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Instructions
  1. Enter the patient's age in years. Age points are added automatically according to the Charlson age-adjustment bands.
  2. The Renal Disease (2 pts) checkbox is pre-ticked because all maintenance dialysis patients have moderate-to-severe kidney disease by definition. Uncheck only if calculating CCI for a non-dialysis CKD patient without severe impairment.
  3. Check all 1-point and 2-point comorbidities that are present and documented in the patient's medical record.
  4. Select the appropriate liver disease severity (none / mild / moderate-to-severe), diabetes category (with or without end-organ damage), malignancy status (metastatic overrides the 2-pt tumor checkbox), and AIDS/HIV if present.
  5. Results update live: CCI comorbidity score, age-adjusted total, estimated 10-year survival, and a plain-language goals-of-care framing statement.

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

When to Use

Use the age-adjusted Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) when structuring a goals-of-care conversation with an elderly patient who has advanced CKD or end-stage kidney disease and is deciding whether to initiate, continue, or withdraw hemodialysis. The CCI is a validated, weighted sum of a patient's chronic illnesses that — together with age points — produces an estimate of long-term survival at a population level.

Appropriate population

Adults with CKD G4–G5 or established ESKD on maintenance dialysis, particularly patients aged 65 or older where a realistic long-term prognosis is needed to frame benefit-versus-burden decisions. Also useful for annual prognosis reassessment when new comorbidities are diagnosed, and for structuring advance care planning conversations. The renal disease item (2 points) is pre-checked because dialysis patients have, by definition, moderate-to-severe kidney disease.

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When NOT to rely on it alone

The CCI is a population-level survival estimate derived from a 1980s medical cohort — it is not an individual prediction and should never be used as the sole criterion to recommend for or against dialysis. A high CCI score does not automatically mean dialysis should be withheld; it means prognosis and goals deserve an explicit, informed conversation. Always pair with frailty assessment (Clinical Frailty Scale, Fried Phenotype), functional status, the patient's values, and nephrologist judgment.

Pearls & Pitfalls
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Use as a conversation anchor, not a verdict

A high CCI score opens the conversation about realistic prognosis — it does not close the conversation about dialysis. Some patients with very high scores choose to proceed with dialysis after an informed discussion; others choose conservative kidney management. The score's value is making the prognosis explicit so the patient can decide from a place of honest information rather than hope or assumption.

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Pair with frailty assessment

The CCI captures comorbidity burden but not functional reserve or frailty. A patient with a moderate CCI but a Clinical Frailty Scale score of 7 (severely frail) carries a very different dialysis risk profile than a non-frail patient with the same CCI. Use the CCI alongside the CFS and Fried Phenotype (see the Frailty Assessment calculator) for the most complete picture.

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Pitfalls

(1) The diabetes item is mutually exclusive — count only the higher category (with or without end-organ damage), never both. (2) Metastatic tumor (6 pts) overrides the non-metastatic solid-tumor checkbox (2 pts) — do not double-count. (3) The renal disease item should be unchecked if calculating for a non-dialysis patient without moderate-to-severe CKD. (4) The survival estimate is population-derived from a 1980s cohort; absolute percentages should be presented as "approximately" and paired with the clinician's own prognostic assessment.

Why Use It

Elderly patients starting hemodialysis carry a disproportionate comorbidity burden. Kurella Tamura et al. (NEJM 2009) showed that nursing-home patients initiating dialysis lost an average of 3.7 functional tasks within 3 months and had a median survival of 16.1 months — outcomes many patients and families had not anticipated. A structured prognosis tool like the age-adjusted CCI makes it possible to present honest, data-anchored survival estimates and to explore whether conservative kidney management (CKM) might better align with a patient's goals. The CCI has been externally validated in dialysis populations and outperforms unaided clinical impression in predicting 1- and 5-year mortality.

Charlson Comorbidity Index (Age-Adjusted)

Check each condition the patient carries and enter the patient's age. The tool computes the comorbidity score, age points, total score, and estimated 10-year survival — and generates a plain-language verdict for goals-of-care framing.

Age points: <50 = 0; 50–59 = 1; 60–69 = 2; 70–79 = 3; 80–89 = 4; +1 per further decade.
If metastatic, leave this unchecked and use the tumor select below (6 pts).
Count diabetes once — choose the higher category if both apply.
If metastatic is selected, the 2-pt solid-tumor checkbox is ignored.
CCI (comorbidity)
Age-adjusted total
Est. 10-yr survival

⚕ Charlson ME, Pompei P, Ales KL, MacKenzie CR. J Chronic Dis. 1987;40(5):373–83. Age adjustment: Charlson et al., J Clin Epidemiol. 1994. Estimated 10-year survival = 0.983(e^(score × 0.9)). This is a population-level prognosis estimate derived from a 1980s medical cohort, not an individual prediction. Always interpret alongside frailty, functional status, dialysis tolerance, and the patient's own goals.

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

Comorbidity items and weights

ConditionPoints
Myocardial infarction1
Congestive heart failure1
Peripheral vascular disease1
Cerebrovascular disease (TIA / stroke)1
Dementia1
Chronic pulmonary disease (COPD / asthma)1
Connective tissue / rheumatic disease1
Peptic ulcer disease1
Mild liver disease (without portal hypertension)1
Diabetes without end-organ damage1
Hemiplegia / paraplegia2
Moderate-to-severe renal disease / dialysis2
Diabetes with end-organ damage (retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy)2
Solid tumor (non-metastatic, diagnosed or treated within 5 years) / leukemia / lymphoma2
Moderate-to-severe liver disease (cirrhosis with portal hypertension)3
Metastatic solid tumor6
AIDS / HIV (not just seropositive)6

Age adjustment (added to comorbidity score)

Age bandAdditional points
Under 500
50–591
60–692
70–793
80–894
90 and above5

Interpretation bands (age-adjusted total score)

Age-adjusted totalComorbidity burdenApprox. 10-yr survivalGoals-of-care framing
0–2Low> 90%Prognosis generally favors continued dialysis if indicated; focus on quality of life and vascular risk
3–4Moderate53–77%Competing mortality risks are meaningful; frame an honest benefit-versus-burden conversation
5–6High21–53%High competing mortality; explicitly weigh dialysis burden against conservative kidney management
≥ 7Very high< 21%Very high 1-year mortality; structured advance-care planning and CKM should be discussed as a genuine alternative

Survival formula: 10-year survival (%) = 0.983^(e^(score × 0.9)) × 100. Derived from Charlson et al., J Clin Epidemiol. 1994. Validation in hemodialysis cohorts confirms predictive validity, though absolute survival percentages reflect historical cohorts and should be interpreted as relative risk estimates rather than precise predictions.

Evidence & References

The Charlson Comorbidity Index was originally derived and validated in a 1980s hospitalized medical cohort and has since been validated across multiple dialysis populations worldwide. The age-adjustment was published by Charlson et al. in 1994 and is the standard applied in nephrology studies. KDIGO's 2024 CKD guideline explicitly recognizes the CCI as a useful prognostic tool to support conservative kidney management discussions. The survival formula used here (0.983^(e^(CCI × 0.9))) is the standard published derivation.

  1. Charlson ME, Pompei P, Ales KL, MacKenzie CR. A new method of classifying prognostic comorbidity in longitudinal studies: development and validation. J Chronic Dis. 1987;40(5):373–383.
  2. Charlson M, Szatrowski TP, Peterson J, Gold J. Validation of a combined comorbidity index. J Clin Epidemiol. 1994;47(11):1245–1251.
  3. Kurella Tamura M, Covinsky KE, Chertow GM, Yaffe K, Landefeld CS, McCulloch CE. Functional status of elderly adults before and after initiation of dialysis. N Engl J Med. 2009;361(16):1539–1547.
  4. Al-Muhaiteeb A. Conservative kidney management in elderly patients with advanced CKD: an emerging paradigm. Kidney360. 2025 (in press).
  5. KDIGO. Clinical Practice Guideline for CKD Evaluation and Management (2024). Kidney International, 2024.
Important: The Charlson Comorbidity Index is a research and clinical decision-support tool, not a deterministic recommendation for or against dialysis. Individual prognosis depends on many factors beyond what the CCI captures. All goals-of-care conversations should involve the patient, family, and the treating nephrologist. This calculator does not replace individualized clinical judgment.
References 3 sources
  1. Charlson ME et al. J Chronic Dis. 1987
  2. Charlson M et al. J Clin Epidemiol. 1994
  3. 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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