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Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome

SIMPLE SUMMARY: The determination of albumin in the urine can give different results depending on the method used. Specialists must pay particular attention to the method used for the determination of urine albumin, creatinine, and ACR. ABSTRACT: Urinalysis is commonly used as a screening tool for k...

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Autores principales: Terracina, Sergio, Pallaria, Antonio, Lucarelli, Marco, Angeloni, Antonio, De Angelis, Annarita, Ceci, Flavio Maria, Caronti, Brunella, Francati, Silvia, Blaconà, Giovanna, Fiore, Marco, Ferraguti, Giampiero
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10135658/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37189791
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11041174
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author Terracina, Sergio
Pallaria, Antonio
Lucarelli, Marco
Angeloni, Antonio
De Angelis, Annarita
Ceci, Flavio Maria
Caronti, Brunella
Francati, Silvia
Blaconà, Giovanna
Fiore, Marco
Ferraguti, Giampiero
author_facet Terracina, Sergio
Pallaria, Antonio
Lucarelli, Marco
Angeloni, Antonio
De Angelis, Annarita
Ceci, Flavio Maria
Caronti, Brunella
Francati, Silvia
Blaconà, Giovanna
Fiore, Marco
Ferraguti, Giampiero
author_sort Terracina, Sergio
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: The determination of albumin in the urine can give different results depending on the method used. Specialists must pay particular attention to the method used for the determination of urine albumin, creatinine, and ACR. ABSTRACT: Urinalysis is commonly used as a screening tool for kidney disease. In many cases, the dipstick urine assay includes the assessment of albumin/protein and creatinine; consequently, the value of their ratio is available on the urine section report. Identification of albuminuria/proteinuria at early stages is an important issue to prevent or at least delay the onset of chronic kidney disease (CKD), kidney failure, and the progression of cardiovascular damage linked to the kidney’s loss of function. Sensitive and specific diagnostic methods are required for the assessment of such an important biomarker: urine albumin, creatinine, and their ratio (ACR) measured with quantitative assays are considered the gold standard. Routine dipstick methods (more rapid and at a lower cost) are intended for wide population screening. The aim of our study was to verify the reliability of an automated urinalysis dipstick method by comparing the results with the quantitative test of creatinine and albumin performed on a clinical chemistry platform. The first-morning voids of 249 patients who arrived from different departments were analyzed in the Central Laboratory of the University Hospital Policlinico Umberto I in Rome. We found a good correlation between the two assays, even though we observed that the dipstick assessment tends to overestimate the ACR’s value, disclosing a higher number of false positives if compared to the reference method. As an important novelty in this study, we analyzed our data considering age (starting from pediatric to geriatric patients) and sex as variables for a sub-stratification of the participants. Our results show that positive values need to be confirmed with quantitative methods, especially in women and younger people, and that from samples that resulted as diluted at the dipstick assay, the ACR’s values can be obtained if they are reanalyzed with quantitative assays. Moreover, patients with microalbuminuria (ACR 30–300 mg/g) or severe albumin urinary excretion (ACR > 300 mg/g) should be reanalyzed using quantitative methods to obtain a more reliable calculation of the ACR.
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spelling pubmed-101356582023-04-28 Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome Terracina, Sergio Pallaria, Antonio Lucarelli, Marco Angeloni, Antonio De Angelis, Annarita Ceci, Flavio Maria Caronti, Brunella Francati, Silvia Blaconà, Giovanna Fiore, Marco Ferraguti, Giampiero Biomedicines Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: The determination of albumin in the urine can give different results depending on the method used. Specialists must pay particular attention to the method used for the determination of urine albumin, creatinine, and ACR. ABSTRACT: Urinalysis is commonly used as a screening tool for kidney disease. In many cases, the dipstick urine assay includes the assessment of albumin/protein and creatinine; consequently, the value of their ratio is available on the urine section report. Identification of albuminuria/proteinuria at early stages is an important issue to prevent or at least delay the onset of chronic kidney disease (CKD), kidney failure, and the progression of cardiovascular damage linked to the kidney’s loss of function. Sensitive and specific diagnostic methods are required for the assessment of such an important biomarker: urine albumin, creatinine, and their ratio (ACR) measured with quantitative assays are considered the gold standard. Routine dipstick methods (more rapid and at a lower cost) are intended for wide population screening. The aim of our study was to verify the reliability of an automated urinalysis dipstick method by comparing the results with the quantitative test of creatinine and albumin performed on a clinical chemistry platform. The first-morning voids of 249 patients who arrived from different departments were analyzed in the Central Laboratory of the University Hospital Policlinico Umberto I in Rome. We found a good correlation between the two assays, even though we observed that the dipstick assessment tends to overestimate the ACR’s value, disclosing a higher number of false positives if compared to the reference method. As an important novelty in this study, we analyzed our data considering age (starting from pediatric to geriatric patients) and sex as variables for a sub-stratification of the participants. Our results show that positive values need to be confirmed with quantitative methods, especially in women and younger people, and that from samples that resulted as diluted at the dipstick assay, the ACR’s values can be obtained if they are reanalyzed with quantitative assays. Moreover, patients with microalbuminuria (ACR 30–300 mg/g) or severe albumin urinary excretion (ACR > 300 mg/g) should be reanalyzed using quantitative methods to obtain a more reliable calculation of the ACR. MDPI 2023-04-13 /pmc/articles/PMC10135658/ /pubmed/37189791 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11041174 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Terracina, Sergio
Pallaria, Antonio
Lucarelli, Marco
Angeloni, Antonio
De Angelis, Annarita
Ceci, Flavio Maria
Caronti, Brunella
Francati, Silvia
Blaconà, Giovanna
Fiore, Marco
Ferraguti, Giampiero
Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome
title Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome
title_full Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome
title_fullStr Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome
title_full_unstemmed Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome
title_short Urine Dipstick Analysis on Automated Platforms: Is a Reliable Screening Tool for Proteinuria? An Experience from Umberto I Hospital in Rome
title_sort urine dipstick analysis on automated platforms: is a reliable screening tool for proteinuria? an experience from umberto i hospital in rome
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10135658/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37189791
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11041174
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