학술논문

Conversion of Urine Protein-Creatinine Ratio or Urine Dipstick Protein to Urine Albumin-Creatinine Ratio for Use in Chronic Kidney Disease Screening and Prognosis : An Individual Participant-Based Meta-analysis.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Annals of Internal Medicine. 9/15/2020, Vol. 173 Issue 6, p426-435. 10p. 5 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*CHRONIC kidney failure
*URINE
*PROGNOSIS
*KIDNEY diseases
*PROTEINS
*PROTEINURIA diagnosis
*DIAGNOSTIC reagents & test kits
*META-analysis
*MEDICAL screening
*PROTEINURIA
*RESEARCH funding
*URINALYSIS
*ALBUMINURIA
*CREATININE
Language
ISSN
0003-4819
Abstract
Background: Although measuring albuminuria is the preferred method for defining and staging chronic kidney disease (CKD), total urine protein or dipstick protein is often measured instead.Objective: To develop equations for converting urine protein-creatinine ratio (PCR) and dipstick protein to urine albumin-creatinine ratio (ACR) and to test their diagnostic accuracy in CKD screening and staging.Design: Individual participant-based meta-analysis.Setting: 12 research and 21 clinical cohorts.Participants: 919 383 adults with same-day measures of ACR and PCR or dipstick protein.Measurements: Equations to convert urine PCR and dipstick protein to ACR were developed and tested for purposes of CKD screening (ACR ≥30 mg/g) and staging (stage A2: ACR of 30 to 299 mg/g; stage A3: ACR ≥300 mg/g).Results: Median ACR was 14 mg/g (25th to 75th percentile of cohorts, 5 to 25 mg/g). The association between PCR and ACR was inconsistent for PCR values less than 50 mg/g. For higher PCR values, the PCR conversion equations demonstrated moderate sensitivity (91%, 75%, and 87%) and specificity (87%, 89%, and 98%) for screening (ACR >30 mg/g) and classification into stages A2 and A3, respectively. Urine dipstick categories of trace or greater, trace to +, and ++ for screening for ACR values greater than 30 mg/g and classification into stages A2 and A3, respectively, had moderate sensitivity (62%, 36%, and 78%) and high specificity (88%, 88%, and 98%). For individual risk prediction, the estimated 2-year 4-variable kidney failure risk equation using predicted ACR from PCR had discrimination similar to that of using observed ACR.Limitation: Diverse methods of ACR and PCR quantification were used; measurements were not always performed in the same urine sample.Conclusion: Urine ACR is the preferred measure of albuminuria; however, if ACR is not available, predicted ACR from PCR or urine dipstick protein may help in CKD screening, staging, and prognosis.Primary Funding Source: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases and National Kidney Foundation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]