| Literature DB >> 33488855 |
Monika Kamianowska1, Marek Szczepański1, Elżbieta E Kulikowska1, Barbara Bebko1, Alicja Koput2, Anna Wasilewska3.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Monitoring of renal function in acute kidney injury in the pediatric population is complicated by the lack of age-related reference values of new biomarkers. Urinary netrin-1 is a new marker to demonstrate early kidney damage. Netrin-1 has a molecular mass of 72 kDa. It is therefore unlikely that it is filtered by the glomerulus under normal conditions. However, netrin-1 is highly induced after acute and chronic kidney injury and excreted in urine in humans. The aim of the study was to determine the normal concentrations of urinary netrin-1 in healthy full-term newborns.Entities:
Keywords: healthy; netrin-1; newborn; normal ranges
Year: 2021 PMID: 33488855 PMCID: PMC7811309 DOI: 10.5114/aoms/89591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Med Sci ISSN: 1734-1922 Impact factor: 3.318
Figure 1Study flow diagram. Prenatal complications: TORCH infection, coagulation disorders, hypertension, diabetes, antibiotic therapy in the third trimester of pregnancy, abnormal prenatal ultrasound examination. Early/late postnatal complications: among others congenital anomaly, intrauterine growth retardation, Apgar’s score ≤ 7, intrauterine infections, elevated inflammatory markers, cardiovascular disorders, respiratory disorders, serological conflict, abnormal physical examination, digestive disorders, pathological jaundice
Median and quartiles (Q1–Q3) for urinary concentrations of netrin-1 and serum concentrations of cystatin C and creatinine in full-term healthy neonates, stratified according to their gender and timing of urine sampling
| Group | Whole group | Females | Males | 1st day of life | 2nd day of life |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median (Q1–Q3) | |||||
| uNetrin-1 [ng/ml] | 0.574 (0.438–0.896) | 0.574 (0.442–0.958) | 0.574 (0.426–0.786) | 0.645 (0.442–1.000) | 0.523 (0.426–0.738) |
| uNetrin-1/crea [ng/mg crea] | 0.771 (0.400–1.611) | 0.744 (0.419–1.454) | 0.776 (0.386–1.621) | 1.486 (0.495–3.107) | 0.622 |
| uCreatinine [mg/ml] | 82.69 (47.43–123.97) | 94.12 (48.74–121.70) | 80.63 (44.35–124.80) | 49.08 (37.79–105.370) | 98.53 |
| sCystatin C [ng/ml] | 1729.46 (1612.40–1954.29) | 1727.01 (1613.32–1945.80) | 1762.60 (1612.40–1960.53) | 1753.63 (1613.32–1945.80) | 1719.20 (1605.06– 1954.29) |
| sCreatinine [mg/ml] | 0.780 (0.590–0.935) | 0.740 (0.580–0.820) | 0.805 (0.620–0.960) | 0.780 (0.620–0.960) | 0.760 (0.590–0.900) |
p – comparison between the measurement at 1st and 2nd day of life (p < 0.05), crea – creatinine, sCystatin C – serum cystatin C, sCreatinine – serum creatinine, uNetrin-1 – urinary netrin-1, uCreatinine – urinary creatinine.
Figure 2Netrin-1 concentration after normalization for urinary creatinine concentration depending on day of urine collection
Figure 3Netrin-1 concentration after normalization for urinary creatinine concentration depending on gestational age
Figure 4Correlation between urinary netrin-1/crea and birth weight of newborns