| Literature DB >> 23865673 |
Dane A De Silva, Anne C Halstead, Anne-Marie Côté, Yasser Sabr, Peter von Dadelszen, Laura A Magee.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: For clinicians, it is important to rely on accurate laboratory results for patient care and optimal use of health care resources. We sought to explore our observations that urine protein:creatinine ratios (PrCr) ≥30 mg/mmol are seen not infrequently associated with normal pregnancy outcome.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23865673 PMCID: PMC3733961 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-13-152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Baseline characteristics of the 160 women in the study cohort (N (%) or median [interquartile range], as appropriate)
| | |
| Maternal age (yr) | 34 [31–37] |
| Primiparous | 75 (46.9%) |
| Multiple pregnancy | 5 (3.1%) |
| | |
| Outpatient | 131 (81.9%) |
| N samples collected before 1300 hours | 128 (80%) |
| Gestational age when urine sample taken | 24 [20–32] |
| On antihypertensive therapy | 31 (19.4%) |
| Hypertensive disorder at sampling | 61 (38.1%) |
| 25 (15.6%) | |
| 3 (1.9%) | |
| 19 (11.9%) | |
| 14 (8.8%) | |
| Medical co-morbidities other than hypertension | |
| 60 (37.5%) | |
| 21 (13.1%) | |
| Specific co-morbidities (N women) | |
| 16 (10%) | |
| 8 (5%) | |
| 47 (29.4%) | |
| | |
| Delivery at BCWH or post-partum follow-up | 112 (70%) |
| Not known or lost to follow-up | 48 (30%) |
| Miscarriage or elective termination | 4 (3.6%) |
| Stillbirth | 1 (0.9%) |
| Placental abruption or other APH | 3 (2.8%) |
| Preterm pre-labour rupture of membranes | 4 (3.7%) |
| Chorioamnionitis | 1 (0.9%) |
| Gestational age at delivery (wk) | 38 [37–39] |
| 17 (15.7%) | |
| Caesarean section | 52 (48.1%) |
| Small for gestational age infants | 19 (17.6%) |
| Neonatal intensive care unit admission | 12 (11.1%) |
APH (antepartum haemorrhage), BCWH (British Columbia Women’s Hospital and Health Centre), HELLP (haemolysis, elevated liver enzyme, low platelet) syndrome.
* No women had acute kidney injury. All eight women with chronic kidney disease were outpatients. Their serum creatinines ranged from 48-207 μM with only one woman having a pre-recruitment serum creatinine >90 μM.
† Other medical co-morbidities included the following (N women): thyroid disorders (15), systemic lupus erythematosus (6) or another connective issue disorder (4), depression (5), anemia (4), antiphospholipid antibody syndrome (3), polycystic ovarian syndrome (2), multiple sclerosis (2), immune thrombocytopenia (2), Raynaud’s (2), diabetes insipidus (1), hypercholesterolemia (1), biliary colic (1), deep vein thrombosis (1), polycythemia vera (1), polymyositis (1), scleroderma (1), pulmonary fibrosis (1), Addison’s disease (1), Crohn’s disease (1), celiac disease (1), histiocytosis (1), hepatitis B (1), hyperaldosteronism (1), asymptomatic bacteriuria (1), and/or solitary kidney (1).
Figure 1Random urinary protein:creatinine ratio (PrCr, mg/mmol) according to urinary creatinine concentration for all random urine samples (N = 233) (mmol/L). The horizontal dotted line represents a PrCr of 30 mg/mmol, the current cut-off for detection of 0.3 g/d of proteinuria. The vertical dotted line represents a urinary creatinine concentration of 3 mmol/L. Women with known normal pregnancy outcome are represented by the darker circles.
Figure 2Random urinary protein:creatinine ratio (PrCr, mg/mmol) according to urinary creatinine concentration using the last sample before delivery (mmol/L). A) Last urine samples provided. B) Excluding urine samples with specific gravity (SG) ≤ 1.010. The horizontal dotted line represents a PrCr of 30 mg/mmol, the current cut-off for detection of 0.3 g/d of proteinuria. The vertical dotted line represents a urinary creatinine concentration of 3 mmol/L. Women with known normal pregnancy outcome are represented by the darker circles.
Figure 3Urinary creatinine concentration (mmol/L) according to the time of day of urine sampling (24 hour clock).
N (%) of samples with urinary PrCr ≥ 30 mg/mmol according to urinary creatinine concentrations, in current study and two other study cohorts from the same (our) institution
| | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | | | |
| All samples in current study | 233 | 64/68 (94.1%) | 27/165 (16.4%) | <0.001 |
| All samples from women with known normal pregnancy outcome | 45 | 13/14 (92.9%) | 0/31 | <0.001 |
| Last urine sample from all women | 160 | 47/50 (94.0%) | 17/110 (15.4%) | <0.001 |
| Last urine sample from women with known normal pregnancy outcome | 32 | 10/11 (90.9%) | 0/21 | <0.001 |
| Last urine sample from women with urinary SG >1.010 | 104 | 9/11 (81.8%) | 12/93 (12.9%) | <0.001 |
| Last urine sample excluding samples with dipstick hematuria or leukocytes | 98 | 37/39 (94.9%) | 10/59 (16.9%) | <0.001 |
| | | | | |
| Last sample per woman | 197 | 12/18 (66.7%) | 99/179 (55.3%) | 0.354 |
| | | | | |
| | N = 601 | N = 1285 | | |
| Pyrogallol red proteinuria assay | 2432 | 482/655 (73.6%) | 1089/1777 (61.3%) | <0.001 |
| Vitros proteinuria assay | 468 | 119/122 (97.5%) | 196/346 (56.6%) | <0.001 |
| | N = 103 | N = 331 | | |
| Pyrogallol red proteinuria assay | 607 | 92/125 (73.6%) | 313/482 (64.9%) | 0.067 |
| Vitros proteinuria assay | 43 | 11/11 (100%) | 18/32 (56.3%) | 0.008 |
PrCr (protein:creatinine) ratio.
Figure 4All 24-hour PrCr results using the pyrogallol red dye from a published cohort of women with 24-hour urine collection. The horizontal dotted line represents a PrCr of 30 mg/mmol, the current cut-off for detection of 0.3 g/d of proteinuria. The vertical dotted line represents a urinary creatinine concentration of 3 mmol/L.
Dilution studies using a standard urine specimen containing 0.335 g/L of protein and either deionized water or saline as the diluent
| | | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Undiluted | 0.335 g/L | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| 1:2 | 0.168 g/L | 0.242 g/L | 144% | 0.183 g/L | 109% |
| 1:3 | 0.112 g/L | 0.199 g/L | 178% | 0.140 g/L | 125% |
| 1:4 | 0.084 g/L | 0.183 g/L | 219% | 0.118 g/L | 141% |
| 1:5 | 0.067 g/L | 0.172 g/L | 257% | 0.106 g/L | 158% |
n/a (not applicable).
* Water measured on its own yielded a protein concentration of 0.12 g/L.
† The unexpectedly high result for underlines the problem with dilute samples. The assay is optimized for measuring urine, not aqueous samples. Method calibrators contain protein (bovine serum albumin) added to a synthetic urine matrix with inorganic salts, a polymer, preservatives and stabilizers. Protein containing calibrators are targeted at 0.80 and 2.10 g/L and the curve is extrapolated down. The low end is verified with a calibrator at less than 0.15 g/L. In the Vitros methods, the lower analytical limit is defined by performance (precision and linearity studies) at a low level in urine or synthetic urine samples. The dye works optimally at the ionic strength of non-dilute urine (due to the various ions present), so that protein as low as 0.05 g/L can be detected with confidence. But in a low ionic strength solution (such as pure water or saline), the dye binding characteristics result in false detection of protein.
‡ Saline on its own yielded a proteinuria concentration of 0.06 g/L.