Literature DB >> 11409124

Spot urine uric acid to creatinine ratio used in the estimation of uric acid excretion in primary gout.

Y Moriwaki1, T Yamamoto, S Takahashi, J Yamakita, Z Tsutsumi, T Hada.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Uric acid overexcretion in patients with gout is frequently assessed by the measurement of 24 hour urinary uric acid excretion, which is cumbersome with ambulatory patients, and requires accurate timing and complete collection of the specimen. We assessed whether uric acid to creatinine ratio (Uua/Ucr) in spot urine is useful for the estimation of uric acid overexcretion in patients with gout.
METHODS: One hundred thirty male patients with gout and 33 non-gout male control subjects were studied. Early morning urine and/or a portion of 24 h collected urine (24 h urine) were used as spot urine samples. Uric acid overexcreters were defined as those with a 24 h urinary uric acid excretion > or = 1000 mg/day, while uric acid underexcreters were defined as those with uric acid clearance < 6 ml/min.
RESULTS: There was a significant relationship between 24 h urinary uric acid excretion and early morning urine Uua/Ucr in patients with gout, while no such relationship was observed in controls. No significant difference in Uua/Ucr was observed between patients with gout and controls, or in Uua/Ucr between gout uric acid overexcreters and underexcreters in early morning urine. A significant difference in this value was observed between the 2 groups in the 24 h urine specimens. Although the diagnostic accuracy of gout uric acid overexcretion was 87.2% using early morning urine and 89.6% using 24 h urine, the sensitivity of gout uric acid overexcretion was only 25.0% when using early morning urine and 25.0% when using 24 h urine, when the cutoff value of Uua/Ucr was 0.63 and 0.64, respectively.
CONCLUSION: Uua/Ucr using spot urine, especially early morning urine, is not an accurate indicator of uric acid overexcretion in patients with gout.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11409124

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Rheumatol        ISSN: 0315-162X            Impact factor:   4.666


  5 in total

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  5 in total

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