Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria
Aims. Microalbuminuria and, to a lesser extent, renal tubular proteins are widely used in the early detection of incipient nephropathy in diabetes mellitus. Recent reports have indicated detrimental effects of storage at - 20°C on urine proteins. This study investigated the effects of storage on the...
Autors principals: | , , , , |
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Format: | Journal article |
Idioma: | English |
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2000
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_version_ | 1826262886844989440 |
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author | Schultz, C Dalton, R Turner, C Neil, H Dunger, D |
author_facet | Schultz, C Dalton, R Turner, C Neil, H Dunger, D |
author_sort | Schultz, C |
collection | OXFORD |
description | Aims. Microalbuminuria and, to a lesser extent, renal tubular proteins are widely used in the early detection of incipient nephropathy in diabetes mellitus. Recent reports have indicated detrimental effects of storage at - 20°C on urine proteins. This study investigated the effects of storage on the measurement of urine proteins and discusses implications for the interpretation of data. Methods. Two-hundred and sixty-eight specimens, collected from children with Type 1 diabetes, split into duplicate aliquots and stored at -20°C and -70°C, respectively, for 6-8 months, were analysed for albumin, retinol binding protein, N-acetyl glucosaminidase and creatinine, in the same assays to eliminate inter-assay variability. Two independent non-diabetic cohorts of children provided urine specimens, which were stored at -20°C for one cohort and -70°C for the other, to determine normal ranges for urine proteins. Results. Storage at -20°C led to a variable underestimation of all three urine proteins in 20% of specimens. Creatinine was unaffected. This underestimation was greater in more concentrated urine (r2 = 0.38, P < 0.001, n = 262). Consequently storage at -20°C increased the variance of the albumin/creatinine ratio more than the variance of albumin concentration. Temperature of storage affected the normal range, which was 0.1-2.1 mg/mmol at -20°C compared to 0.3-3.1 mg/mmol at -70°C. The prevalence of microalbuminuria (> 2SD above the geometric mean in non-diabetic specimens stored at -20°C) was 27% after storage at -70°C vs. 24% after -20°C. The prevalence of microalbuminuria (> 2SD above the geometric mean in nondiabetic specimens stored at -70°C) was 21% after storage at -70°C vs. 17% after -20°C. Conclusions. Urine proteins are significantly but variably underestimated after storage at -20 °C. These effects account for increased variance and differences in the normal range, but have less effect on the detection of microalbuminuria than might be predicted. |
first_indexed | 2024-03-06T19:42:55Z |
format | Journal article |
id | oxford-uuid:21464af1-8248-4c99-959a-d43ecb8e1d2b |
institution | University of Oxford |
language | English |
last_indexed | 2024-03-06T19:42:55Z |
publishDate | 2000 |
record_format | dspace |
spelling | oxford-uuid:21464af1-8248-4c99-959a-d43ecb8e1d2b2022-03-26T11:32:29ZFreezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuriaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:21464af1-8248-4c99-959a-d43ecb8e1d2bEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2000Schultz, CDalton, RTurner, CNeil, HDunger, DAims. Microalbuminuria and, to a lesser extent, renal tubular proteins are widely used in the early detection of incipient nephropathy in diabetes mellitus. Recent reports have indicated detrimental effects of storage at - 20°C on urine proteins. This study investigated the effects of storage on the measurement of urine proteins and discusses implications for the interpretation of data. Methods. Two-hundred and sixty-eight specimens, collected from children with Type 1 diabetes, split into duplicate aliquots and stored at -20°C and -70°C, respectively, for 6-8 months, were analysed for albumin, retinol binding protein, N-acetyl glucosaminidase and creatinine, in the same assays to eliminate inter-assay variability. Two independent non-diabetic cohorts of children provided urine specimens, which were stored at -20°C for one cohort and -70°C for the other, to determine normal ranges for urine proteins. Results. Storage at -20°C led to a variable underestimation of all three urine proteins in 20% of specimens. Creatinine was unaffected. This underestimation was greater in more concentrated urine (r2 = 0.38, P < 0.001, n = 262). Consequently storage at -20°C increased the variance of the albumin/creatinine ratio more than the variance of albumin concentration. Temperature of storage affected the normal range, which was 0.1-2.1 mg/mmol at -20°C compared to 0.3-3.1 mg/mmol at -70°C. The prevalence of microalbuminuria (> 2SD above the geometric mean in non-diabetic specimens stored at -20°C) was 27% after storage at -70°C vs. 24% after -20°C. The prevalence of microalbuminuria (> 2SD above the geometric mean in nondiabetic specimens stored at -70°C) was 21% after storage at -70°C vs. 17% after -20°C. Conclusions. Urine proteins are significantly but variably underestimated after storage at -20 °C. These effects account for increased variance and differences in the normal range, but have less effect on the detection of microalbuminuria than might be predicted. |
spellingShingle | Schultz, C Dalton, R Turner, C Neil, H Dunger, D Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
title | Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
title_full | Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
title_fullStr | Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
title_full_unstemmed | Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
title_short | Freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
title_sort | freezing method affects the concentration and variability of urine proteins and the interpretation of data on microalbuminuria |
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