| Literature DB >> 36230418 |
Gaby van Galen1,2, Emil Olsen3, Natalia Siwinska4.
Abstract
Creatinine only allows detection of kidney disease when 60 to 75% of the glomerular function is lost and is therefore not an ideal marker of disease. Additional biomarkers could be beneficial to assess kidney function and disease. The objectives are to describe new equine kidney biomarkers. This systematic review assesses the available literature, including the validation process and reference values, following which the authors suggest recommendations for clinical use. SDMA may have some potential as equine kidney biomarker, but there is currently a lack of evidence that SDMA offers any advantage compared to creatinine in detecting Acute Kidney Injury (AKI). Cystatin C and podocin show potential as biomarkers for kidney disease (including detecting AKI earlier than creatinine) and should be studied further. NGAL has potential as a biomarker of kidney disease (including detecting AKI earlier than creatinine), and potential as an inflammatory marker. Literature on MMP-9 does not allow for conclusive statements about its potential as a biomarker for kidney disease. The future may show that NAG has potential. For all biomarkers, at this stage, available scientific information is limited or too scarce to support clinical use, and only SDMA can be measured for clinical purposes. In conclusion, there are multiple new biomarkers with the potential to diagnose kidney problems. However, there are only a few studies available and more data is needed before these biomarkers can be applied and recommended in our daily practice.Entities:
Keywords: MMP; NAG; NGAL; SDMA; assay; cystatin C; equine; podocin; reference range; renal; validation
Year: 2022 PMID: 36230418 PMCID: PMC9559299 DOI: 10.3390/ani12192678
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 3.231
List of the variables described for each biomarker for kidney disease in horses.
| Type of Information | Details | Data Obtained from |
|---|---|---|
| Molecular information | Type of molecule | Other studies, no systematic literature search |
| Physiological information | Origin | Other studies, no systematic literature search |
| Analytical information | Which assays are available (type, brand, developed for which species, commercially available?) | Systematic literature search as specified in Materials and Method section |
| Clinical information | Validation data (overlap/clinical/outcome; phase II, II IV) | Systematic literature search as specified in Materials and Method section |
| Author conclusions | What knowledge or development is still required for clinical use in horses? | Discussion between authors, based on the above literature data |
No statistical analyses were performed for this systematic review.
Figure 1Flow diagram of the literature search for studies on biomarkers on equine kidney disease. SDMA—symmetric dimethylarginine; NGAL—neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin. Searches were always in combination with the search word horse or equine.
List of studies on symmetric dimethylarginine (SDMA) concentrations in blood in horses and its analytical and clinical characteristics.
| Study | Assay Used | Nr. of Horses Included | Nr. of Horses with AKI or CKD | Comparison to Traditional Kidney Assessment | Association with Clinical State | Validation Phase | Reference Range Healthy Horses | Extrarenal Factors Influencing Reference Range | Limitations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lo, H.C., Winter, J.C., Merle, R., Gehlen, H. Symmetric dimethylarginine and renal function analysis in horses with | DLD SDMA ELISA kit (DLD Diagnostika GmbH) (validated by [ | 41 horses with dehydration | 1 with AKI for 48 h, 1 with AKI for 12 h | Good correlation with creatinine, not with urea | Dehydration severity | Phase II | n/a | Dehydration | Limited AKI cases |
| 2 | Bozorgmanesh, R., Thornton, J., Snyder, J., Fletcher, C., Mack, R., Coyne, | IDEXX SDMA high throughput immunoassay (validated by [ | 104 healthy periparturient TB mares (last month of gestation) and 125 their full-term foals (first month of life) | 0 | SDMA higher than adult values during first month; creatinine only for the first 12 h after birth | n/a | n/a | Birth 0–100 microgr/dL; | No correlation between mare SDMA and foal SDMA | Upper limit assay 100 microgr/dL |
| 3 | Gough, R.L., McGovern, K.F. Serum symmetric dimethylarginine concentration in healthy neonatal Thoroughbred | IDEXX ELISA (presumably the same as validated [ | 120 healthy neonatal TB foals <36 h | 0 | Correlation with creatinine and urea | n/a | n/a | <168 microgr/dL | Correlation with age, no difference between sexes | No consideration of subclinical disease |
| 4 | Ertelt, A., Stumpff, F., Merle, R., Kuban, S., Bollinger, L., Liertz, S., | Commercial human ELISA & cross checked with liquid chromatograph triple quadrupole mass spectrometry | 78 adult horses with unknown medical history, 23 adult horses with confirmed structural cardiac disease | 0 | n/a | No difference between horse with or without cardiac disease | (Phase I) | 0.3–0.8 micromol/L | n/a | No information on kidney status |
| 5 | Schott, H.C., 2nd, Gallant, L.R., Coyne, M., Murphy, R., Cross, J., | Immunoassay IDEXX, added to an automated multichannel chemistry analyzer allowing high throughput, compared to liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy | 165 healthy adult (>0.5 years old) draft horses | 1 AKI (or dehydration), 7 elevated SDMA with normal—mild increased creatinine | Correlated to creatinine, not to urea nitrogen | n/a | Phase I | Draft horses | Age: no correlation | |
| 6 | Siwinska, N., Zak, A., Paslawska, U. Detecting acute kidney injury in horses by measuring the concentration of | Enzyme immunoassay (EIA) on the Beckmann Coulter analyzer (IDEXX) (mentioned to be validated by [ | 30 healthy adult horses, 30 horses in risk group (with gastro-intestinal disease and/or receiving PBZ/gentamicin), 11 horses with AKI | 11 AKI | Correlated to creatinine and urea, SG and urinary protein. | Health category: SDMA comparable between healthy and at risk, but increased in AKI. At risk group showed no increase in SDMA but increase in traditional renal values (urinary protein and urinary protein/cr ratio and urinary GGT/creatinine ratio) -> limited use of SDMA in subclinical cases | Phase II | <19 microgr/dL | n/a | |
| 7 | Siwinska, N., Zak, A., Slowikowska, M., Niedzwiedz, A., Paslawska, U. Serum symmetric dimethylarginine concentration in healthy horses and horses with | Commercially available and non-species specific enzyme imunoassay ELISA kit (DLD Diagnostika GmbH) from Labor der SYNLAB vet GmHb (Ausburg, Germnay)—validation info in supplementary data) | 53 healthy horses (17 2–6 month old foals and 36 adults) and 23 horses with AKI | 23 AKI | Correlated with creatinine | AKI: higher than healthy | Phase I (validation in supplementary data) | Healthy foals 1.5 ± 0.4 micromol/L | Age: higher in foals, no effect in adults | |
| 8 | Ertelt, A., Merle, R., Stumpff, F., Bollinger, L., Liertz, S., Weber, C., | Commercially available fast ELISA run by DLD Gesellschaft fur Diagnostika und medizinische Gerate mbH, Hamburg, Germany—validated | 52 healthy endurance horses—finishers versus non-finishers | 0 | n/a | Pre vs. post-race | Phase I—validation info provided | Before racing all in ref range of 0.3–0.8 micromol/L | Exercise and finishing endurance: SDMA higher after the race in finishers | |
| 9 | Frączkowska, K., Trzebuniak, Z., Żak, A., Siwińska, N. Measurement of Selected Renal Biochemical Parameters in Healthy Adult Donkeys | Validated enzyme immunoassay performed on a Beckman Coulter analyzer (USA) | 65 healthy adult donkeys | 0 | n/a | n/a | No analytical validation data available in study, but mentioned to be validated | <14 microgr/dL | Freezing and storing for 1 year: no effect |
Legend: AKI—acute kidney injury; CKD—chronic kidney disease; SDMA—symmetric dimethylarginine; ELISA—enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; SG—specific gravity. References: [13,14,15,16,17,18,19,20,21].
List of studies on cystatin C and their analytical and clinical characteristics.
| Study | Assay Used | Sample Type | Nr. of Horses Included | Nr. of Horses with AKI or CKD | Comparison to Traditional Kidney Assessment | Association with Clinical State | Validation Phase | Reference Range Healthy Horses | Extrarenal Factors Influencing Reference Range | Limitations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Siwińska, N., Żak, A., Pasławska, U. Evaluation of Serum and Urine Neutrophil Gelatinase-associated Lipocalin and | Commercially available ELISA kits (MyBioSource, San Diego, CA, USA, catalogue number MBS022947) | Serum (S), urine (U) | 30 healthy horses | 30 at risk of AKI | S cystatin C correlated to urea | U & S cystatin C higher in colics and AKI horses vs. non AKI | Phase I: mentioned that test is validated but no validation data available | S median 0.25 mg/L (1st and 3rd quartile: 0.19–0.37 mg/L) | n/a | Small nr. of cases |
| 2 | Ahmadpour, S., Esmaeilnejad, B., Dalir-Naghadeh, B., Asri-Rezaei, S. Alterations of cardiac and renal biomarkers in horses naturally infected with | Commercially available ELISA kits (MyBioSource, San Diego, CA, USA, catalogue number MBS022947) | serum | 28 horses (3–4 year old) infected with Theileria equi; 20 healthy control horses | 0 | Correlation to urea and creatinine; minimal increase in creatinine and urea, but significant increase in cystatin C -> can identify kidney damage earlier than creatinine and urea | Cystatin C significantly increased in horses with Theleria equi infection (> cut off value set by Siwinska et al. 2021); association to the level of parasitemia. | Phase II overlap healthy—Theileria equi | 0.11 ± 0.07 ng/mL | n/a | Small nr. of horses |
| 3 | Arosalo, B.M., Raekallio, M., Rajamäki, M., Holopainen, E., Kastevaara, T., Salonen, H., | Dako Cytomation latex immunoassay® (Dako Cytomation, Glostrup, Denmark) based on turbidimetry (particle-enhanced tur- bidimetric immunoassay, PETIA) using human cystatin- C-specific antibodies | serum | 7 healthy control horses admitted for elective castration; 5 sick horses admitted for colic and undergoing emergency celiotomy | 0 | n/a | No correlation noted | n/a | Cystatin-C concentrations were below the threshold level of the test (<0.39 mg/L) | n/a | Human cystatin-C test did not work, indicating no or very little cross-reactivity between human and equine cystatin-C specific antibody |
Legend: AKI—acute kidney injury; CKD—chronic kidney disease; ELISA—enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; Se—sensitivity; Sp—specificity; PPV—positive predictive value; NPV—negative predictive value; S—serum; U—urine. References [24,25,26].
List of studies on other biomarkers on kidney disease and their analytical and clinical characteristics.
| Study | Assay Used | Sample Type Used | Nr. of Horses Included | Nr. of Horses with AKI or CKD | Comparison to Traditional Kidney Assessment | Association with Clinical State | Validation Phase | Reference Range Healthy Horses | Extrarenal Factors | Limitations | |
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| 1 | Siwińska, N., Pasławska, U., Bąchor, R., Szczepankiewicz, B., Żak, A., | Qualitative method—liquid chromatography mass spectrometry in multiple reaction monitoring mode (LC-MS-MRM) | Urine | 30 healthy horses | 30 at risk of AKI | Higher serum creatinine and urea levels, as well as proteinuria, | Podocin higher in horses with AKI vs. healthy horses; horses at risk for AKI have elevated podocin, but less than horses with AKI | Phase I: validated qualitative method; mentioned that quantitative test is validated but no validation data mentioned | 0.19–1.2 ng/mL | n/a | Small nr. of cases |
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| 1 | Arosalo, B.M., Raekallio, M., Rajamäki, M., Holopainen, E., Kastevaara, T., Salonen, H., | SPS-PAGE gelatin zymography. Zymograms were analyzed for total gelatinolytic activity, complex-, proMMP-9, active MMP-9, and MMP-2 forms. The assays were performed as previously described | Plasma and urine | 7 healthy control horses admitted for elective castration; 5 sick horses admitted for colic and undergoing emergency celiotomy | 0 | Creatinine higher in colic group but within reference ranges (no azotemia) | Plasma MMP-2 was higher in colic horses than controls—suggested to be related to endotoxemia | No exact values reported in the publication (only boxplot graphs) | n/a | n/a | Small nr. of cases |
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| 1 | Bayless, R.L., Moore, A.R., Hassel, D.M., Byer, B.J., Landolt, G.A., Nout-Lomas YS. Equine urinary | Photometric assay ( | Urine | 7 hospitalized horses with azotemia and 7 non-azotemic horses with normal creatinine | 0 | Urine NAG was significantly correlated with urinary fractional excretion of sodium and plasma creatinine. | NAG was higher in azotemic horses compared to non-azotemic horses | Phase 1: No reference standard to compare with validation data acceptable. | n/a | NAG concentration affected by urine pH | Small nr. of patients |
Legend: AKI—acute kidney injury; CKD—chronic kidney disease; FENa—fractional excretion of sodium; Se—sensitivity; Sp—specificity; PPV—positive predictive value; NPV—negative predictive value; ELISA—enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. References [24,27,50].
List of studies on neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) in horses and its analytical and clinical characteristics.
| Study | Assay Used | Sample Type | Nr. of Horses Included | Nr. of Horses with AKI or CKD | Comparison to Traditional Kidney Assessment | Association with Clinical State | Validation Phase | Reference Range Healthy Horses | Extrarenal Factors Influencing Reference Range | Limitations | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Siwińska, N., Żak, A., Pasławska, U. Evaluation of Serum and Urine Neutrophil Gelatinase-associated Lipocalin and | Commercially available ELISA kits (MyBioSource, San Diego, CA, USA, catalogue number MBS087573) | Serum (S), urine (U) | 30 healthy horses | 30 at risk of AKI | S NGAL low correlations with BUN and urine GGT/creatinine ratio. | U & S NGAL higher in colics and AKI horses vs. non AKI | Phase I: mentioned that test is validated but no validation data available | S median 50.5 ng/mL (25–95.20 ng/mL) | n/a | No assessment of inflammation |
| 2 | Frydendal, C., Nielsen, K.B., Berg, L.C., van Galen, G., Adler, D.M.T., | Bioporto porcine NGAL ELISA (kit 044), Copenhagen, Denmark | Serum (S), synovial fluid (SF) | 19 healthy horses | 0 | n/a | Synovial inflammation: NGAL increases I S and in SF (SF > S) | Phase II, however not including kidney disease | n/a | n/a | No assessment of kidney disease in these patients |
| 3 | Winther, M.F., Haugaard, S.L., Pihl, T.H., Jacobsen, S. Concentrations of neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin are increased in | Bioporto porcine NGAL ELISA (kit 044), Copenhagen, Denmark | Serum (S), peritoneal fluid (PF) | 270 horses with acute colic | 0 | n/a | Simple obstructions and strangulating obstructions similar S and PF NGAL as healthy (low). | Phase II, however not including kidney disease | S: median 21.0, range 4.4–41.9 microg/L | n/a | |
| 4 | Jacobsen, S., Berg, L.C., Tvermose, E., Laurberg, M.B., van Galen, G. Validation of an ELISA for detection of neutrophil gelatinase-associated | Bioporto porcine NGAL ELISA (kit 044), Copenhagen, Denmark | serum | 20 horses with elevated creatinine >130 micromol/L, 19 healthy horses with creatinine <100 micromol/L | 20 kidney cases | Yes, elevated creatinine associated with elevated NGAL | NGAL differs between horses with normal creatinine versus increased creatinine | Full phase I assay validation. | 7.4–103.6 microgr/L, median 21.5 microgr/L, mean 28.5 microgr/L | n/a | 130 micromol/L creatinine cut off is relatively low to identify AKI, no assessment of inflammation |
| 5 | Marnie Flick, Anne Mette Lindberg Vinther, Stine Jacobsen, Lise C. Berg, Marina Gimeno, Denis Verwilghen, Wade Howden, Kate Averay, Gaby van Galen (2021). Is serum Neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) concentration in horses affected by racing? A pilot study. JVCP [ | Bioporto porcine NGAL ELISA (kit 044), Copenhagen, Denmark | serum | 14 healthy TB racehorses: pre-racing and 24 H post-racing | 0 | Yes compared to creatinine and SAA. All normal creatinine and normal SAA | n/a | n/a | 16.98–47.70 ng/mL | Racing has no effect: pre- and post-racing similar values of NGAL | No other disciplines than racing |
Legend: AKI—acute kidney injury; CKD—chronic kidney disease; NGAL—neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin; ELISA—enzyme linked immunosorbent assay; Se—sensitivity; Sp—specificity; PPV—positive predictive value; NPV—negative predictive value; S—serum; U—urine; SF—synovial fluid; PF—peritoneal fluid. References [25,36,37,38,40].
Overview of molecular and physiological information on the identified kidney biomarkers.
| Molecular Information | Physiological Information | References | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of Molecule | Size | Origin | Function in the Body | Kidney Physiology | Extra Renal Factors Influencing Biomarker in Other Species | ||
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| SDMA | Methylated aminoacid | 202.25 | Generated intracellularly during protein degradation as analogues of L-arginine; enantiomer of ADMA | Methylation of arginine residues appears to be required for RNA processing, protein shuttling and signal transduction. SDMA has an indirect effect on NO synthesis by interfering with tubular arginine absorption | Almost all SDMA is excreted by kidneys, concentration proportional to GFR. Some hepatic clearance also occurs | Factors that impact GFR | [ |
| Cystatin C | Cationic and non-glycosylated protein | 13 kDa | Produced by all nucleated cells of the body and is released into the intravascular compartment at a constant rate | Protease inhibitor | Filtered from the blood through the glomerulus and catabolized, but not secreted, by the proximal tubular cells. Concentration proportional to GFR. | Inflammation, metabolic diseases, and even the interval between feeding and serum collection. Factors that impact GFR. Independent from age, sex, race, muscle mass | [ |
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| Podocin | Podocyte associated molecule | 450 kDa | Present exclusively in podocytes (specialized glomerular epithelial cells), especially near the slit diaphragms | Podocin is one of the proteins that constitute the slit-diaphragms of the glomerulus (modified tight junction that facilitates size and charge dependent permselectivity) | Released in urine following podocyte damage | Physiological podocyturia, more in concentrated urine | [ |
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| NGAL | Lipocalin protein | 25 kDa | Activated neutrophils, and various epithelial cells, kidney tubular cells | Plays a role in iron metabolism and innate immunity to bacteria, kidney development, growth factor for stimulated epithelia (inflammation, bacterial infection or neoplasia), tubular regeneration after injury, protective effect for kidney ischaemia-reperfusion injury | Highly expressed in response to tubular injury | Inflammation | [ |
| MMP | Metalloproteinases | Pro-MMP 72 kDa; MMP-2 59–62 kDa; proMMP-9 68–92 kDa (dependent on activation status) | All cells | Degradation of extracellular matrix proteins, role in apoptosis | Small molecules pass through glomerular filtration, but in most healthy animals are reabsorbed in the proximal tubules. Excretion in urine increases with tubular or glomerular damage | Endotoxemia influences plasma levels | [ |
| NAG | Enzyme | 130–140 kDa | Lysosomal enzyme in proximal tubular epithelium | Lysosomal enzyme | Released in case of tubular damage | Physiologic exostosis into the tubular lumen. | [ |
Legend: SDMA—symmetric dimethylarginine; NGAL—neutrophilgelatinase-associated lipocalin; MMP—matrix metalloproteinases; NAG—N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase; GFR—glomerular filtration rate.