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Urinary transferrin pre-emptively identifies the risk of renal damage posed by subclinical tubular alterations.
- Source :
-
Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine & pharmacotherapie [Biomed Pharmacother] 2020 Jan; Vol. 121, pp. 109684. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Nov 25. - Publication Year :
- 2020
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Abstract
- Nephrotoxicity is an important limitation to the clinical use of many drugs and contrast media. Drug nephrotoxicity occurs in acute, subacute and chronic manifestations ranging from glomerular, tubular, vascular and immunological phenotypes to acute kidney injury. Pre-emptive risk assessment of drug nephrotoxicity poses an urgent need of precision medicine to optimize pharmacological therapies and interventional procedures involving nephrotoxic products in a preventive and personalized manner. Biomarkers of risk have been identified in animal models, and risk scores have been proposed, whose clinical use is abated by their reduced applicability to specific etiological models or clinical circumstances. However, our present data suggest that the urinary level of transferrin may be indicative of risk of renal damage, where risk is induced by subclinical tubular alterations regardless of etiology. In fact, urinary transferrin pre-emptively correlates with the subsequent renal damage in animal models in which risk has been induced by drugs and toxins affecting the renal tubules (i.e. cisplatin, gentamicin and uranyl nitrate); whereas transferrin shows no relation with the risk posed by a drug affecting renal hemodynamics (i.e. cyclosporine A). Our experiments also show that transferrin increases in the urine in the risk state (i.e. prior to the damage) precisely as a consequence of reduced tubular reabsorption. Finally, urinary transferrin pre-emptively identifies subpopulations of oncological and cardiac patients at risk of nephrotoxicity. In perspective, urinary transferrin might be further explored as a wider biomarker of an important mechanism of predisposition to renal damage induced by insults causing subclinical tubular alterations.<br /> (Copyright © 2019. Published by Elsevier Masson SAS.)
- Subjects :
- Acetylglucosaminidase urine
Animals
Biomarkers urine
Contrast Media adverse effects
Creatinine blood
Disease Susceptibility
Female
Humans
Kidney Diseases chemically induced
Kidney Diseases urine
Lipocalin-2 urine
Male
Middle Aged
Platinum adverse effects
Rats, Wistar
Risk Factors
Urea blood
Kidney Tubules pathology
Transferrin urine
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1950-6007
- Volume :
- 121
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Biomedicine & pharmacotherapy = Biomedecine & pharmacotherapie
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 31810121
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2019.109684