Abstract

BackgroundThe urine protein-creatinine ratio (UPCR) in a spot first-morning urine sample is used to estimate 24-h urine proteinuria (24hUP) in patients who underwent urine protein testing. UPCR cannot be directly compared with 24-h proteinuria. Thus, an equation to estimate 24-h total protein excretion rate, using age, gender, and the UPCR may improve its bias and accuracy in patients who underwent urine protein testing.MethodsWe simultaneously measured 24-h urine protein and the same day’s first-morning spot urine from patients with kidney disease. Generalized linear and no-linear models, using age, gender, and UPCR, were constructed to estimate for 24-h urine protein and the best model (NJ equation) was selected to estimated 24 hUP (e24hUP).ResultsA total of 5435 paired samples (including a training cohort of 3803 patients and a validation cohort of 1632 patients) were simultaneously measured for UPCR and 24-h urine protein. In the training cohort, the unadjusted UPCR obviously underestimated 24-h urine protein when UPCR ≤1.2 g/g (median bias − 0.17 g/24 h) and overestimated 24-h urine protein when UPCR > 1.2 g/g (median bias 0.53 g/24 h). In the validation cohort, the NJ equation performed better than the unadjusted UPCR, with lower root mean square error (0.81 vs. 1.02, P < 0.001), less bias (median difference between measured and estimated urine protein, − 0.008 vs. 0.12), improved precision (interquartile range of the differences, 0.34 vs. 0.50), and greater accuracy (percentage of estimated urine protein within 30% of measured urine protein, 53.4% vs. 32.2%). Bland-Altman plot indicated that the agreement of spot and daily estimates was less pronounced with 24 hUP > 2 g than lower values.ConclusionsThe NJ e24hUP equation is more accurate than unadjusted UPCR to estimate 24 hUP in patients with kidney disease and could be used for laboratory application.

Highlights

  • The urine protein-creatinine ratio (UPCR) in a spot first-morning urine sample is used to estimate 24-h urine proteinuria (24hUP) in patients who underwent urine protein testing

  • Proteinuria is a common feature of chronic nephropathies, and those with greater levels of proteinuria are at greater risk of declining in glomerular filtration rate, as

  • UPCR is recognized as a screening tool for patients with proteinuric kidney diseases, the raw unadjusted UPCR cannot be directly compared with 24-h proteinuria in patients with proteinuric kidney diseases

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Summary

Introduction

The urine protein-creatinine ratio (UPCR) in a spot first-morning urine sample is used to estimate 24-h urine proteinuria (24hUP) in patients who underwent urine protein testing. An equation to estimate 24-h total protein excretion rate, using age, gender, and the UPCR may improve its bias and accuracy in patients who underwent urine protein testing. The urine protein-creatinine ratio (UPCR) in a single spot first-morning urine sample, could serve as a convenient and satisfactory substitute for the determination of protein excretion in 24-h urine collection [6, 7]. We assessed the correlation between first-morning spot UPCR and 24 hUP from 5435 paired urine samples with diverse degrees of proteinuria. We developed an equation (Named NJ equation) to estimate 24 hUP based on UPCR, age, and gender in our renal center

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