| Literature DB >> 26835152 |
Jessica M Sontrop1, Amit X Garg1, Lihua Li2, Kerri Gallo2, Virginia Schumann2, Jennifer Winick-Ng2, William F Clark2, Matthew A Weir1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Multiple first-morning urine samples are recommended for measuring the urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (ACR); however, this can be challenging in community-based research.Entities:
Keywords: ACR; Albumin-to-creatinine ratio; Chronic kidney disease; First-morning urine samples; Pilot study
Year: 2016 PMID: 26835152 PMCID: PMC4734866 DOI: 10.1186/s40697-016-0095-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Can J Kidney Health Dis ISSN: 2054-3581
Sample characteristics at baseline (n = 26)
| Mean age, years (SD) [min-max] | 62.9 (14.0) [31–84] |
| Men, | 23 (88.5 %) |
| Caucasian, | 20 (76.9 %) |
| Mean body mass index, kg/m2 (SD) [min-max] | 32 (6) [25–45] |
| Mean serum creatinine, umol/L (SD) [min-max] | 197 (74) [104–349] |
| Mean eGFR, ml/min/1.73 m2 (SD) [min-max] | 36 (15) [15–60] |
| Mean SBP, mm Hg (SD) [min-max] | 140 (25) [108–192] |
| Mean DBP, mm Hg (SD) [min-max] | 75 (10) [50–97] |
| History of smoking, | 15 (57.7 %) |
| Current smoker, | 3 (11.5 %) |
| Primary CKD diagnosis, | |
| Diabetes | 15 (57.7 %) |
| Hypertension | 2 (7.7 %) |
| Interstitial nephritis | 3 (11.5 %) |
| Other | 6 (23.1 %) |
| Comorbidities, | |
| Hypertension | 23 (88.5 %) |
| Hyperlipidemia | 23 (88.5 %) |
| Diabetes | 18 (69.2 %) |
| Coronary artery disease | 6 (23.1 %) |
| Chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder | 5 (19.2 %) |
| CVA/TIA | 4 (15.4 %) |
| Peripheral vascular disease | 1 (3.8 %) |
| Congestive heart failure | 2 (7.7 %) |
| Gastric bleeding | 1 (3.8 %) |
CKD chronic kidney disease, CVA/TIA cerebrovascular accident/transient ischemic attack, eGFR estimated glomerular filtration rate, SD standard deviation
Albumin-to-creatinine ratio (mg/mmol) from three consecutive first-morning urine samples collected at baseline and at 3-month follow-up (n = 26)
| Sample collection | Geometric mean (95 % CI) | Median (interquartile range) | Min, max |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | |||
| Day 1 | 87 (59.1 to 128.7) | 104.3 (41, 163) | 15, 459 |
| Day 2 | 83 (55.6 to 124.0) | 98.7 (42, 159) | 12, 453 |
| Day 3 | 80 (52.3 to 121.0) | 93.0 (35, 165) | 11, 506 |
| 3 months | |||
| Day 1 | 101 (66.7 to 151.4) | 119.3 (40, 239) | 15, 623 |
| Day 2 | 110 (73.1 to 165.9) | 107.1 (62, 257) | 14, 729 |
| Day 3 | 97 (65.5 to 143.1) | 102.1 (39, 246) | 15, 541 |
Samples were analyzed for the albumin-to-creatinine ratio on the same day of collection
Change in the albumin-to-creatinine ratio between baseline and 3-month follow-up (n = 26)
| Number of urine samples | Percentage change in ACR (geometric mean and 95 % CI) |
|---|---|
| One samplea | 15.2 % (−9.2 to 46.1 %) |
| Average of two consecutive samplesb | 24.3 % (2.1 to 51.3 %) |
| Average of three consecutive samplesc | 22.6 % (0.0 to 50.3 %) |
ACR albumin-to-creatinine ratio
aFirst urine sample
bFirst and second urine samples
cFirst, second, and third urine samples
Fig. 1Effect of delayed laboratory analysis on the geometric mean of the urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio at baseline and 3 months (n = 26)
Fig. 2Effect of delayed laboratory analysis on the geometric mean of the percentage change in the urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio between baseline and 3 months (n = 26)
Total sample size needed to detect a 10 to 20 % difference between two groups in the geometric mean of the percentage change in ACR under different scenarios
| Minimum detectable difference between groups | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of urine samples at each time point (baseline and follow-up) | Log-scale standard deviationa | 10 % | 15 % | 20 % |
| One sample | 0.59 | 984 | 414 | 220 |
| Average of two consecutive samples | 0.49 | 678 | 286 | 152 |
| Average of three consecutive samples | 0.50 | 706 | 298 | 158 |
Based on a type I error of 5 % and power of 80 %
aStandard deviation of the log-transformed percentage change in the albumin-to-creatinine ratio between baseline and 3-month follow-up