| Literature DB >> 28728609 |
Jennifer L J Heaney1, John P Campbell1,2, Punit Yadav1,3, Ann E Griffin1, Meena Shemar4, Jennifer H Pinney1,3, Mark T Drayson5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Acute kidney injury (AKI) is common in patients with multiple myeloma (MM). Whether serum free light chain (sFLC) measurements can distinguish between myeloma and other causes of AKI requires confirmation to guide early treatment. A rapid and portable sFLC test (Seralite®) is newly available and could reduce delays in obtaining sFLC results and accelerate diagnosis in patients with unexplained AKI. This study evaluated the accuracy of Seralite® to identify MM as the cause of AKI.Entities:
Keywords: Acute kidney injury; Myeloma; Patient screening; Renal impairment; Serum free light chain
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28728609 PMCID: PMC5520226 DOI: 10.1186/s12882-017-0661-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nephrol ISSN: 1471-2369 Impact factor: 2.388
Free light chain (FLC) parameters from serum samples analysed using Seralite®
| Median (range) | Myeloma AKI | Myeloma AKI | Non-myeloma AKI | Healthy donors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| κ FLC (mg/L) | 2193 | 12 | 36 | 11 |
| λ FLC (mg/L) | 32 | 2262 | 94 | 11 |
| κ:λ ratio | 81 | 0.006 | 0.4 | 1 |
| FLC sum (mg/L) | 2215 | 2353 | 134 | 22 |
| dFLC (mg/L) | 2171 | 2189 | 57 | 3 |
Patients included multiple myeloma patients with a monoclonal κ or λ FLC and acute kidney injury (AKI), patients with non-myeloma related AKI and healthy donors
Fig. 1Serum κ FLC (a) and λ FLC (b) levels analysed using Seralite®. Data is shown for patients with multiple myeloma (with either a monoclonal κ or λ FLC) and acute kidney injury (AKI), patients with AKI without myeloma (non-myeloma related AKI) and healthy donors. Boxes show the interquartile range, with the line indicating the median, and the whiskers show the minimum and maximum. * indicates a significant difference to the non-myeloma related AKI group; † indicates a significant difference to healthy donors; p < .01 for all comparisons
Fig. 2Serum κ:λ FLC ratio analysed using Seralite®. Data is shown for patients with multiple myeloma (with either a monoclonal κ or λ FLC) and acute kidney injury (AKI), patients with AKI without myeloma (non-myeloma related AKI) and healthy donors. Boxes show the interquartile range, with the line indicating the median, and the whiskers show the minimum and maximum. * indicates a significant difference to the non-myeloma related AKI group; † indicates a significant difference to healthy donors; p < .05 for all comparisons
Fig. 3Serum FLC sum (a) and FLC difference (dFLC, b) analysed using Seralite®. Data is shown for patients with multiple myeloma (with either a monoclonal κ or λ FLC) and acute kidney injury (AKI), patients with AKI without myeloma (non-myeloma related AKI) and healthy donors. Boxes show the interquartile range, with the line indicating the median, and the whiskers show the minimum and maximum. * indicates a significant difference to the non-myeloma related AKI group; † indicates a significant difference to healthy donors; p < .01 for all comparisons. FLC sum = κ FLC + λ FLC; dFLC difference = involved minus the uninvolved LC in myeloma patients/maximum FLC minus the minimum FLC in patients without myeloma and healthy donors
Serum FLC parameters to differentiate patients with and without myeloma in patients presenting with AKI
| AUC | Best cut-off | Sensitivity | Specificity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ratio: myeloma κ | 1.0 | 2.02 | 100% | 100% |
| Ratio: myeloma λ | 1.0 | 0.14 | 100% | 100% |
| FLC sum | 0.97 | 528 mg/L | 89% | 94% |
| dFLC | 0.99 | 399 mg/L | 91% | 100% |
Data is shown ROC analyses for the κ:λ ratio, FLC sum and FLC difference (dFLC) measured using Seralite®. Area under curve (AUC, with 95% confidence intervals [CI]) was calculated and the best cut-off point identified with associated sensitivity and specificity are reported for each FLC parameter
Fig. 4Proposed screening pathway for myeloma in unexplained acute kidney injury (AKI) using Seralite® in patients at risk of myeloma. Screening of individual patients should be informed by risk factors such as age (> 60 years old) or other clinical features where myeloma could be suspected. The κ:λ ratio can be used to screen for myeloma and the FLC difference (dFLC – defined as the maximum FLC level minus the minimum FLC level) can be used to aid subsequent decisions for clinical management. If an abnormal κ:λ ratio is identified using the renal reference range of 0.14–2.02, a dFLC ≥400 mg/L can be used to indicate a high likelihood of cast neuropathy and stratify patients for consideration of immediate therapy to reduce serum FLC levels