Abstract

While proteinuria aggravates dyslipidemia in diabetic patients, dyslipidemia further worsens proteinuria via inflammatory cytokines-mediated glomerular damage. Urinary albumin creatinine ratio (ACR) is an easy and reliable method of detecting proteinuria. This study aims to determine the association of ACR with lipid abnormalities and glycemic control in the Nepalese population. This was a cross-sectional study conducted among 201 diabetes patients visiting the outpatient department of internal medicine. Based on ACR values, patients were categorized as nonalbuminuric (less than 300μg/mg) or albuminuric (more than 300μg/mg). An unpaired t-test was used to compare the mean of various lipoproteins in these two categories. Binary logistic regression was used to check the association of ACR with sociodemographic factors (age, sex, and education), hypertension, and glycated hemoglobin. Albuminuric patients had higher mean cholesterol (192.8±53.5 vs. 184.2± 37.6; P=0.209), triglyceride (194.9±97.8 vs. 164.4±73.7; P=0.017) and low-density lipoprotein (99.9±38.4 vs. 90.0±27.4; P=0.034) but lower high-density lipoprotein (53.9±18.5 vs. 61.3±19.9; P=0.008) compared to nonalbuminuric patients. There was a significant difference in mean HbA1c values across albuminuria and nonalbuminuria groups (7.1±1.1 vs. 6.7±0.8; OR: 1.4, 95% CI=1.1-1.9, P=0.030). Urine ACR of more than 30mg/gram was associated with higher triglyceride and low-density lipoprotein levels and lower high-density lipoprotein levels. The HbA1c level strongly correlates with the development of albuminuria.

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