Abstract

Background It is important to know the intraindividual variation of biomarkers to be able to distinguish a change of a biomarker due to the course of the disease from the normal biological variation of the marker. The purpose of this study was to investigate the day-to-day variability of urine markers in nephrology patients. Materials 23 nephrology patients were included in the study. First morning urine samples were collected daily for ten consecutive days and analyzed for U-cystatin C, U-KIM1, U-NGAL and U-creatinine. The day-to-day variation was calculated as concentrations of the markers and as creatinine ratios. Values deviating more than the 90th percentile of the normal intraindividual variation was used to define a disease/treatment specific change. Results The day-to-day coefficient of variation (CV) for individual patients varied between 9.6 and 100.3% for NGAL (mean 45.6%) and between 8.8 and 107.3% for the NGAL/creatinine ratio (mean 43.8%). The corresponding values for KIM1 were between 10.9 and 60.2% (mean 30.1%) and for the ratio between 8.7 and 59.8% (mean 23.4%) and for cystatin C 3.8–67.4% (mean 25.0%) and for the cystatin C/creatinine ratio 5.9–78.4% (mean 24.8%). Conclusions The similar intraindividual CV values between the renal tubules damage markers and their corresponding creatinine ratios speaks against using creatinine ratio. Using the 90th percentiles of the CV values as a limit for clinical change means that NGAL has to change by 83.3%, KIM1 by 45.5% and Cystatin C by 46.3% before the change can be considered clinically significant in patients with chronic kidney disease.

Highlights

  • It is essential to distinguish between the change of a biomarker due to the course of the disease and/or due to the treatment as opposed to change because of nonspecific variation

  • Values deviating more than the 90th percentile of the normal intraindividual variation was used to define a disease/treatment specific change

  • The similar intraindividual coefficient of variation (CV) values between the renal tubules damage markers and their corresponding creatinine ratios speaks against using creatinine ratio

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Summary

Introduction

It is essential to distinguish between the change of a biomarker due to the course of the disease and/or due to the treatment as opposed to change because of nonspecific variation. It is important to be aware of the normal variation of biomarkers in the patient population. The variation not related to the specific disease is due to preanalytical, analytical and postanalytical variation [1,2,3]. It is important to know the intraindividual variation of biomarkers to be able to distinguish a change of a biomarker due to the course of the disease from the normal biological variation of the marker. The purpose of this study was to investigate the day-to-day variability of urine markers in nephrology patients. Values deviating more than the 90th percentile of the normal intraindividual variation was used to define a disease/treatment specific change

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