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Draško Pavlović

Abstract
Albuminuria is a powerful marker of kidney
disease and predictive factor of cardiovascular disease. Early
detection and treatment of albuminuria in patients with
diabetic and nondiabetic kidney disease, hypertension and
cardiovascular disease improves overall survival. Nephrologists and
clinical chemistries should be aware of screening, monitoring and
treatment of albuminuria.
Introduction
Chronic kidney disease (CKD) defined as either
kidney damage or decreased kidney function for three or more months
is a worldwide public health problem. It affects approximately 10%
of adult population in western world (1).
CKD could be simplified classified in two major
groups: diabetic and nondiabetic chronic kidney disease. (Table
11.1.) (2). The diagnosis of CKD is based on level of glomerular
filtration rate (GFR) and by some of the markers of kidney damage.
Differential diagnosis of CKD is based on the history, physical
examination and laboratory evaluation. Proteinuria is the principal
marker of kidney damage. Moreover proteinuria, i.e. albuminuria is
a powerful marker of progressive kidney function decline (3). There
are also some other markers of kidney damage like hematuria,
abnormalities in urine sediment, abnormal findings on imaging
studies, e.g. ultrasound etc.
Table 11.1.
Classification of chronic kidney disease
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Classification of chronic kidney disease
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- Nondiabetic kidney disease
- glomerular disease
- tubulointerstitial disease
- vascular disease
- cystic disease
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In this paper we will briefly review the
mechanism of proteinuria, particularly albuminuria, the clinical
importance of albuminuria and clinical approach in the diagnosis of
albuminuria and monitoring of the therapy.
Since 1817, when Richard Bright described
proteinuria in patients with kidney disease detection of
proteinuria remains one of the major indicator of kidney disease.
At the late sixties of last century increased urinary albumin
excretion was observed in new diabetic patients. In 1981 the term
microalbuminuria was used for the first time to describe urinary
albumin excretion not detected by a standard dipstick. Today it is
well known that microalbuminuria and albuminuria, i.e. proteinuria
are predictors of progression of renal disease and also marker and
risk factor of cardiovascular disease: myocardial infarction,
stroke and premature death. Sir Robert Hutchinson' s words from the
beginning of 20th century are still appropriate today at the
beginning of 21st century: ��the ghosts of dead patients that haunt
us do not ask why we did not employ the latest fad of clinical
investigation. They ask us, why did you not test my urine?�
(4).
Albuminuria
A healthy adults excretes in urine less than 150
mg of protein per day. It is well known that kidney, i.e.
glomerular capillary wall has high permeability to water, small
solutes, low molecular proteins (< 40000 Da and radius < 30
A) but very low permeability to plasma proteins of the size of
albumin (~65000 Da) and larger. Normal composition of urine is:
~40% albumin, ~10% immunoglobulin G, light chains ~5%, and ~42%
other low molecular proteins. There are four mechanism of excessive
(> 150 mg/24 hours) protein excretion: increased glomerular
filtration (glomerular proteinuria), inadequate tubular
reabsorption or increased tubular secretion (tubular proteinuria)
and overflow proteinuria (5).
Albuminuria is of major interest because it is
well known determinant of renal as well as cardiovascular
disease.
Albumin is the most abundant plasma protein. It
has diverse functions: carrier of hormones, metabolites, drugs,
vitamins, ions, maintenance of the oncotic pressure and blood
volume, acid-base buffer functions etc. It is well known that the
size and the charge of the protein determine the amount of filtered
protein (6). For many years it was thought that amount of filtered
albumin is very low and that tubular reabsorption of albumin is of
no clinical relevance. Recently it was recognized that mechanism
regulating tubular uptake of albumin is very important and probably
derangement of tubular reabsortion determine the amount of
albuminuria (6). Even more increased tubular reabosption of albumin
could be a cause of kidney interstitial inflammation and fibrosis.
There is no secretion of albumin in tubular apparatus of the
kidney, therefore glomerular filtration and tubular reabsorption of
albumin determines the amount of albuminuria. The amount of
filtered albumin was detected by several techniques and despite
some controversial it is clear that a significant of albumin is
filtered through glomerular capillary wall (7). In proximal tubule
albumin is reabsorbed by a receptor mediated endocytosis. Several
receptor of albumin have been identified, but most important are
megalin and cubulin (6). Why is this process important? The excess
of albumin in the tubular lumen due to increased filtration through
glomerular capillary wall leads to the induction of inflammation
and interstitial fibrosis. Several studies in vitro has shown that
in excess of albumin there is increased expression of inflammatory
and fibrogenic mediators in tubular cells and it is important
factor in progression in number of renal disease. Therefore,
albuminuria is marker but also a pathogenic factor in progression
of renal disease. The relation between albuminuria and
cardiovascular disease is still poorly understood, but albuminuria
is strong and independent indicator of increased cardiovascular
risk, i.e. it is a marker of generalized vascular endothelial
damage.
How to detect and measure albuminuria?
Urine protein testing involves a screening
test to detect excess of protein, a test to detect the amount of
protein and sometimes an assay to detect specific proteins. We will
briefly described how to measure albuminuria because it is a
central component in screening and management of patients with
kidney disease and could be of great value in patients with
cardiovascular disease.
It is important to know that albumin excretion
could be, and usually is increased after exercise, after a meal and
in young people erect posture can also increase albumin excretion
(4, 8). There is day-to-day variation in albumin excretion , and
what is very important, there is a circadian rhythm of urinary
albumin excretion. Therefore, measurement of 24-hour urine albumin
excretion is the �gold standard� to assess albuminuria.
Unfortunately, collecting urine during 24 hours is time-consuming
and inconvenient, it is also subject to error due to inaccurate
timing and incompleteness. It is widely accepted to use dipstick
test to detect protein, i.e. albumin in the urine. The test is
semiqantitative and is insensitive to detect small amounts of
albumin, i.e. < 30 mg/dl. The test has specificity of > 95%
but very low sensitivity ~40%. It can give false-positive results
(concentrated urine, hematuria, contrast agents etc) and false -
negative results (dilute urine). Dipsticks test for
microalbuminuria (very low level of albumin in urine) are also
available, with good sensitivity of 88% and a specificity of 80%.
At present various antibody - based methods are used to measure
urinary albumin (RIA, ELISA, nephelometry etc). Recently, a new
method, i.e. high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) was
developed. By this method immunoreactive and immunononreactive
albumin could be measured (8, 9, 10). It is beyond the scope of
this lecture to evaluate these techniques.
From clinical point of view more important is
which sample of urine should be collected and how should be
albuminuria expressed.
There is no doubt that the reference method to
measure urinary albumin excretion is a 24-hour urine collection.
But it is impractical, and we need more simple and less costly
methods, et least in screening and in epidemiological studies.
There are another reliable methods in evaluation of albuminuria:
timed overnight collections, spot urine, i.e. first morning samples
and random samples. Last two methods are untimed and results are
expressed as albumin concentration or as albumin-creatinine ratio
(Table 11.2.) To avoid influence of circadian variation, physical
activity and hydration status the best sample is first-morning
sample. More studies have been published and suggest that
expression albuminuria as albumin-creatinine ratio is acceptable
method in evaluation of albuminuria with good correlation with gold
standard, i.e. 24-hour albumin excretion. Creatinine excretion in
the urine depends on muscle mass, i.e. on gender, therefore we need
different definitions for albuminuria for women and men. (Table
11.2.) (8, 9).
Table11.2.
Classification of urinary albumin excretion
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Method of urine
collection
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Normal
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Microalbuminuria
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Macroalbuminuria
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24h urine (mg/24h)
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< 15
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30 to < 300
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> 300
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Overnight urine (�g/min)
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< 10
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20 to < 200
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> 200
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Spot urine
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< 10
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20 to < 200
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> 200
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male (mg/mmol)
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< 1.25
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2.5 to < 25
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> 25
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female (mg/mmol)
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< 1.75
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3.5 to < 35
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> 35
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male (mg/g)
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< 10
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20 to < 200
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> 200
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female (mg/g)
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< 15
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30 to < 300
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> 200
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When and how often to evalaute albuminuria?
Once again albuminuria is an early sign of
progressive kidney and cardiovascular disease in persons with and
without diabetes (8, 11, 12). Unfortunately, despite many data of
clinical value of screening and treatment of albuminuria, many
diabetic and much more non diabetics are not screened for
albuminuria. Any clinical screening program should fulfil some
criteria, e.g. the disease for which the screening test should be
used is an important health problem, the course of the disease is
well described, the disease could be detectable in an early phase,
there is suitable test to indicate the early phase of the disease,
etc. Early detection of albuminuria in diabetics but also in
general population fulfils these criteria.
It is now imperative to test for albuminuria in
every day practice in persons with increased risk for chronic
kidney disease, persons with increased risk for cardiovascular
disease and to monitor therapy. There is no doubt that screening
albuminuria is of great value in diabetics. Besides them it is
reasonable to screen for albuminuria in individuals with obesity,
hyperlipidemia, metabolic syndrome and with hypertension could (13,
14). At this moment we do not have enough date to start with
screening in general population. We need to have in our mind that
many individuals are not aware that they have diabetes or
hypertension but they have albuminuria. Moreover in the PREVEND
study has been shown that albuminuria gradually increases with
increasing blood pleasure or plasma glucose level even within
normal range. In other words, persons with higher but normal range
of blood pressure or glucose level are et risk to have albuminuria,
i.e. it means that albuminuria may precede manifest hypertension or
diabetes.
Another important issue is treatment of
albuminuria. A lot of studies (IRMA, BENEDICT, PREVEND IT etc.)
have shown that lowering of albuminuria by either an
angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors or an angiotensin II
receptor blocker (ARB) are associated with a better renal and
cardiovascular outcome (15, 16, 17, 18). In fact there is
suggestion by some authors that albuminuria reduction should be a
clinical treatment target, like blood pressure changes in
hypertension or glucose level in diabetes. Some observational
studies showed that reduction of albuminuria strongly predict
improve cardiovascular and kidney outcomes and that this prediction
could be largely dissociated from blood pressure changes.
Unfortunately we do not have enough randomized controlled trials to
support albuminuria as an independent therapeutic target. Currently
renoprotective drugs (ACE or ARB drugs) are primarily
antihypertensive drug and reduction of albuminuria is �side
effect�.
At the end, how often should be albuminuria
tested? First, every positive result should be repeated in next two
weeks. Authors opinion is that if both tests are positive treatment
to lower albuminuria should be started in diabetics, individuals
with hypertension and cardiovascular disease. If only one test is
positive it should be repeated after three months (4, 8). During
treatment once per year detection of albuminuria could be performed
(author�s opinion).
Conclusion
There is a lot of evidence that screening for
albuminuria should be carried out in individuals with diabetes, but
also in individuals with hypertension and cardiovascular disease.
At this moment we need more date to support screening for
albuminuria in general population.
At the end, the author did not use in this review
the term microalbuminuria. As it is stated in article by Ruggenenti
P and Remuzzi G, it is time that term microalbuminuria should be
eliminated from our lexicon as there are data to suggest that
albuminuria in �normal� range carries significant risk of
cardiovascular risk. In other words there are no �cut off� values
of normoalbuminuria and microalbuminuria (19). In addition in urine
could be find the intact molecule but also albumin fragment.
Therefore the term microalbuminuria was not used in this
article.
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