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Microalbuminuria in patients with cystic fibrosis
Authors:Lind-Ayres Melanie  Thomas William  Holme Bonnie  Mauer Michael  Caramori Maria Luiza  Moran Antoinette
Affiliation:Department of Pediatric Endocrinology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Abstract:

OBJECTIVE

We previously found that microalbuminuria (MA) is present in 14% of patients with long-standing cystic fibrosis–related diabetes (CFRD). However, others have reported much higher rates of MA in CF patients with and without diabetes (32–67%), suggesting this test is not sufficiently specific for diabetic nephropathy screening in CF. We investigated transient (TMA) and persistent (PMA) microalbuminuria in CF patients to resolve these contradictory findings.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS

We reviewed 1,449 outpatient urinary albumin measurements from 467 patients aged ≥10 years, which were collected over a decade. TMA was defined as a single episode of MA that subsequently was resolved. PMA was defined as two consecutive or two out of three consecutive measurements in the MA range.

RESULTS

The prevalence of TMA that subsequently was resolved in CF patients was similar to the general population. It was found in 7.6% of patients, including 5% of youth (aged 10–17 years) and 9% of adults. PMA was found in 6.1% of the overall CF population, including 2% of youth and 8% of adults. The odds of PMA were increased sevenfold in patients with CFRD (95% CI 2.5–20, P = 0.0002) and 48-fold in patients with both CFRD and organ transplant (95% CI 13–177, P < 0.0001). The five patients with PMA in the absence of CFRD or transplant included two youths with presumed benign orthostatic MA and three adults with hypertension.

CONCLUSIONS

The spot urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio is specific enough to be a valid screening test for diabetic kidney disease in CFRD.Annual urine albumin screening is recommended for people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes to detect early evidence of diabetic kidney disease (1). Elevated urine albumin is also found in patients with cystic fibrosis–related diabetes (CFRD) (26). In a study of 192 CFRD patients, we previously reported that microalbuminuria (MA) was present in 14% of those with long-standing (>10 years) CFRD and, as in the general diabetic population, was associated with worse glycemic control (2). Two other groups, however, have questioned the validity of this association because they found MA to be far more common in CF, even in patients without diabetes (7,8). Dobson et al. (7) reported that MA was present in 67% of single urine samples from six CF patients with diabetes and in 32% of 34 samples from CF patients without diabetes. Another European study (8) found a 58% prevalence of MA in 112 children with CF, none of whom had diabetes. Thus, it was suggested that urine albumin excretion (UAE) may not be specific enough to be used as a screening measure for the detection of diabetic kidney disease in CFRD.The current study attempts to resolve these contradictory findings by determining the prevalence of both transient and persistent MA in CF patients with and without diabetes during routine screening at a large pediatric and adult CF center.
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