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Urine biomarkers of tubular injury do not improve on the clinical model predicting chronic kidney disease progression

Authors :
Chi-yuan Hsu
Dawei Xie
Sushrut S. Waikar
Joseph V. Bonventre
Xiaoming Zhang
Venkata Sabbisetti
Theodore E. Mifflin
Josef Coresh
Clarissa J. Diamantidis
Jiang He
Claudia M. Lora
Edgar R. Miller
Robert G. Nelson
Akinlolu O. Ojo
Mahboob Rahman
Jeffrey R. Schelling
Francis P. Wilson
Paul L. Kimmel
Harold I. Feldman
Ramachandran S. Vasan
Kathleen D. Liu
Lawrence J. Appel
Alan S. Go
John W. Kusek
James P. Lash
Akinlolu Ojo
Raymond R. Townsend
Source :
Kidney international. 91(1)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Few investigations have evaluated the incremental usefulness of tubular injury biomarkers for improved prediction of chronic kidney disease (CKD) progression. As such, we measured urinary kidney injury molecule-1, neutrophil gelatinase–associated lipocalin, N -acetyl-s-D-glucosaminidase and liver fatty acid binding protein under highly standardized conditions among 2466 enrollees of the prospective Chronic Renal Insufficiency Cohort Study. During 9433 person-years of follow-up, there were 581 cases of CKD progression defined as incident end-stage renal disease or halving of the estimated glomerular filtration rate. Levels of the urine injury biomarkers, normalized for urine creatinine, were strongly associated with CKD progression in unadjusted Cox proportional hazard models with hazard ratios in the range of 7 to 15 comparing the highest with the lowest quintiles. However, after controlling for the serum creatinine–based estimated glomerular filtration rate and urinary albumin/creatinine ratio, none of the normalized biomarkers was independently associated with CKD progression. None of the biomarkers improved on the high (0.89) C-statistic for the base clinical model. Thus, among patients with CKD, risk prediction with a clinical model that includes the serum creatinine–based estimated glomerular filtration rate and the urinary albumin/creatinine ratio is not improved on with the addition of renal tubular injury biomarkers.

Details

ISSN :
15231755
Volume :
91
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Kidney international
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba8ef1fb5c3a983648fea47ab0956973