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Título
Albuminuria Pre-Emptively Identifies Cardiac Patients at Risk of Contrast-Induced Nephropathy
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
albuminuria
contrast media
contrast-induced nephropathy
diagnosis
Clasificación UNESCO
3209 Farmacología
Fecha de publicación
2021-10-26
Editor
MDPI
Citación
Vicente-Vicente, L., Casanova, A. G., Hernández-Sánchez, M. T., Prieto, M., Martínez-Salgado, C., López-Hernández, F. J., Cruz-González, I., y Morales, A. I. (2021). Albuminuria pre-emptively identifies cardiac patients at risk of contrast-induced nephropathy. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 10(21), 4942. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10214942
Resumen
[EN]Contrast-induced nephropathy (CIN) is a complication associated with the administration of contrast media (CM). The CIN diagnosis is based on creatinine, a biomarker late and insensitive. The objective proposed was to evaluate the ability of novel biomarkers to detect patients susceptible to suffering CIN before CM administration. The study was carried out with patients undergoing cardiac catheterization involving CM. Patients were divided into two groups: (1) CIN, patients who developed this pathology; (2) control, patients who did not suffer CIN. Prior to the administration of CM, urine samples were collected to measure proteinuria, N-acetyl-β-d-glucosaminidase, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin and kidney injury molecule-1, albumin, transferrin, t-gelsolin and GM2 ganglioside activator protein (GM2AP). The risk factors advanced age, low body mass index and low estimated glomerular filtration rate; and the urinary biomarkers albumin, transferrin and GM2AP showed significant predictive capacity. Of all of them, albuminuria demonstrated the highest diagnostic power. When a cutoff point was established for albuminuria at values still considered subclinical (10-30 µg/mg Cru), it was found that there was a high incidence of CIN (40-75%). Therefore, albuminuria could be applied as a new diagnostic tool to prevent and predict CIN with P4 medicine criteria, independently of risk factors and comorbidities.
URI
ISSN
2077-0383
DOI
10.3390/jcm10214942
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