Diagnostic Code 7530 · 38 CFR §4.115
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) is a gradual loss of kidney function over time. The kidneys filter waste and excess fluid from your blood, and when they fail, dangerous levels of toxins build up. CKD progresses through five stages based on glomerular filtration rate (GFR), from mild impairment (Stage 1) to kidney failure requiring dialysis or transplant (Stage 5). Symptoms may not appear until the disease is advanced and can include fatigue, swelling in the legs and ankles, nausea, loss of appetite, decreased urine output, and confusion. Veterans may develop CKD secondary to service-connected diabetes, hypertension, exposure to nephrotoxic medications or chemicals during service, or from contrast dye used in medical imaging for other service-connected conditions.
| Rating | Criteria |
|---|---|
| 0% | Kidney function tests show mild impairment but no symptoms requiring treatment. |
| 30% | Moderately reduced kidney function with albumin in the urine, elevated creatinine, or reduced GFR requiring dietary restrictions and medication. Blood pressure management for kidney protection is needed. |
| 60% | Significantly reduced kidney function with persistent edema (swelling), protein in the urine, reduced GFR below 30, and the need for multiple medications to manage kidney function and related complications like anemia and bone mineral loss. Daily activities are limited by fatigue and fluid management. |
| 80% | Severe kidney disease with markedly reduced function, persistent generalized edema, significant proteinuria, and symptoms requiring intensive management. Dialysis may be approaching. |
| 100% | Kidney failure requiring regular dialysis or following kidney transplant. A kidney transplant receives a 100% rating for one year post-surgery, then re-evaluation. Ongoing dialysis maintains the 100% rating. |
Lab results showing GFR, creatinine, BUN, and urine albumin/protein levels over time are the primary evidence. The trend matters more than a single measurement — serial results showing declining kidney function demonstrate progression. If CKD is secondary to diabetes, hypertension, or medication toxicity, a nephrology nexus opinion is needed. Records of any dialysis treatments, dietary restrictions, and kidney-protective medications (ACE inhibitors, ARBs) document severity. If a kidney transplant was performed, surgical records and post-transplant treatment records are essential.
Yes. Diabetes and hypertension are the two most common causes of chronic kidney disease. If you are service-connected for either condition and develop CKD, a secondary claim is strongly supported by medical literature. A nephrology nexus opinion documenting the link strengthens the claim.
Veterans on regular dialysis receive a 100% rating for the duration of treatment. If you receive a kidney transplant, you receive 100% for one year following the surgery, then the VA re-evaluates based on your kidney function and residual symptoms.