Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?

Introduction: Assessing proteinuria is of uttermost importance for a nephrologist. It is often indispensable to accurately quantify the amount of protein lost, hence complicated and time-consuming urine collections (the gold standard or “king” of methods – 24-h protein excretion rate [PER]) are ofte...

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Main Authors: Alicja Rydzewska-Rosołowska, Katarzyna Kakareko, Beata Naumnik, Tomasz Hryszko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Karger Publishers 2019-08-01
Series:Kidney & Blood Pressure Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/501884
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spelling doaj-0bb0ea7e66064f5cbb43f9e64fb4804c2020-11-25T03:55:58ZengKarger PublishersKidney & Blood Pressure Research1420-40961423-01432019-08-011910.1159/000501884501884Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?Alicja Rydzewska-RosołowskaKatarzyna KakarekoBeata NaumnikTomasz HryszkoIntroduction: Assessing proteinuria is of uttermost importance for a nephrologist. It is often indispensable to accurately quantify the amount of protein lost, hence complicated and time-consuming urine collections (the gold standard or “king” of methods – 24-h protein excretion rate [PER]) are often replaced by spot urinary protein to creatinine ratio (PCR). The aim of the study was to determine whether the latter can reliably compare to the gold standard and whether “timing” of a spot urine sample is essential. Methods: We performed a prospective, single-center study of 143 consecutive adult patients with glomerular proteinuria (a total of 187 cases). Protein and creatinine concentration was measured in 3 consecutive urine samples (starting with the first morning void) and a simultaneous 24-h urine collection. Agreement between 24-h PER and PCR was evaluated with Bland-Altman plots. Results: Compared to PER 3 consecutive PCRs were 0.86, 0.66, and 0.50 higher with wide limits of agreement respectively. The bias between 2 methods was influenced by sex, CKD stage, albumin concentration and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor/angiotensin receptor blocker treatment. In 24 participants, in whom at least 2 measurements at different time points were available, only 88% of differences were lower than the calculated repeatability coefficient. Conclusions: Unfortunately although random PCR correlates with 24-h protein excretion, the scatter of differences increases as 24-h proteinuria rises (without any significant effect of the sampling time). The observed lack of agreement makes PCR an unsuitable parameter to correctly quantify proteinuria; it is also not useful for monitoring the amount of daily proteinuria in the same patient. Therefore, while searching for new markers, nephrologists can only say: “long live the king!”https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/501884ProteinuriaTimed urine collectionSpot protein to creatinine ratio
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alicja Rydzewska-Rosołowska
Katarzyna Kakareko
Beata Naumnik
Tomasz Hryszko
spellingShingle Alicja Rydzewska-Rosołowska
Katarzyna Kakareko
Beata Naumnik
Tomasz Hryszko
Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?
Kidney & Blood Pressure Research
Proteinuria
Timed urine collection
Spot protein to creatinine ratio
author_facet Alicja Rydzewska-Rosołowska
Katarzyna Kakareko
Beata Naumnik
Tomasz Hryszko
author_sort Alicja Rydzewska-Rosołowska
title Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?
title_short Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?
title_full Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?
title_fullStr Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Different Methods of Urinary Protein Excretion Measurement: Is the King Really Dead?
title_sort comparison of different methods of urinary protein excretion measurement: is the king really dead?
publisher Karger Publishers
series Kidney & Blood Pressure Research
issn 1420-4096
1423-0143
publishDate 2019-08-01
description Introduction: Assessing proteinuria is of uttermost importance for a nephrologist. It is often indispensable to accurately quantify the amount of protein lost, hence complicated and time-consuming urine collections (the gold standard or “king” of methods – 24-h protein excretion rate [PER]) are often replaced by spot urinary protein to creatinine ratio (PCR). The aim of the study was to determine whether the latter can reliably compare to the gold standard and whether “timing” of a spot urine sample is essential. Methods: We performed a prospective, single-center study of 143 consecutive adult patients with glomerular proteinuria (a total of 187 cases). Protein and creatinine concentration was measured in 3 consecutive urine samples (starting with the first morning void) and a simultaneous 24-h urine collection. Agreement between 24-h PER and PCR was evaluated with Bland-Altman plots. Results: Compared to PER 3 consecutive PCRs were 0.86, 0.66, and 0.50 higher with wide limits of agreement respectively. The bias between 2 methods was influenced by sex, CKD stage, albumin concentration and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor/angiotensin receptor blocker treatment. In 24 participants, in whom at least 2 measurements at different time points were available, only 88% of differences were lower than the calculated repeatability coefficient. Conclusions: Unfortunately although random PCR correlates with 24-h protein excretion, the scatter of differences increases as 24-h proteinuria rises (without any significant effect of the sampling time). The observed lack of agreement makes PCR an unsuitable parameter to correctly quantify proteinuria; it is also not useful for monitoring the amount of daily proteinuria in the same patient. Therefore, while searching for new markers, nephrologists can only say: “long live the king!”
topic Proteinuria
Timed urine collection
Spot protein to creatinine ratio
url https://www.karger.com/Article/FullText/501884
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