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Monitoring urinary orosomucoid in patients undergoing cardiac surgery: A promising novel inflammatory marker.

Authors :
Kustán P
Szirmay B
Kőszegi T
Ludány A
Kovács GL
Miseta A
Mühl D
Németh B
Kiss I
Németh Á
Szabados S
Ajtay Z
Source :
Clinical biochemistry [Clin Biochem] 2017 Dec; Vol. 50 (18), pp. 1002-1006. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Jul 21.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Background: Urinary biomarkers might provide non-invasive tool for monitoring of systemic processes. We aimed to investigate the time-course of urinary orosomucoid (u-ORM) excretion after cardiac surgery hypothesizing that u-ORM is an early and sensitive marker of systemic inflammatory activation.<br />Methods: During a 5-day follow-up study we monitored u-ORM levels in cardiovascular patients who underwent on-pump cardiac surgery (n=38). The patients baseline data were compared to healthy control individuals (n=40). u-ORM was measured by a newly developed automated turbidimetric assay and values were referred to urinary creatinine and expressed as u-ORM/u-CREAT (mg/mmol).<br />Results: The cardiovascular patients showed slightly increased baseline u-ORM excretion compared to healthy controls (0.29 vs 0.08mg/mmol, p<0.001). After cardiac surgery, a rapid 10-fold elevation in u-ORM/u-CREAT levels was found. The values remained high till the 3rd postoperative day, and they then decreased significantly (p<0.01) on the 5th day after surgery. u-ORM/u-CREAT mirrored well the perioperative tendency of hs-CRP levels, but it did not follow the non-decreasing kinetics of serum ORM concentrations during the follow-up. u-ORM/u-CREAT correlated significantly (p<0.001) with inflammatory parameters (hs-CRP, se-ORM, WBC).<br />Conclusions: We described u-ORM as an early and sensitive marker of inflammatory activation. The rapid elevation of u-ORM/u-CREAT after surgery and its postoperative kinetics could reflect the magnitude of inflammatory response better than serum ORM and similar to hs-CRP. u-ORM measurements might provide a novel non-invasive tool for real-time monitoring of systemic inflammation, however further investigations are required to confirm it.<br /> (Copyright © 2017 The Canadian Society of Clinical Chemists. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-2933
Volume :
50
Issue :
18
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28736055
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2017.07.010