Biological variation of urinary protein: Creatinine ratio and urine specific gravity in cats

Author:

Mortier Femke1ORCID,Daminet Sylvie1ORCID,Duchateau Luc2,Biscop Ann1ORCID,Paepe Dominique1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Small Animal Department Ghent University Merelbeke Belgium

2. Biometrics Research Center Ghent University Merelbeke Belgium

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundLaboratory results are influenced by presence and severity of disease, as well as preanalytical factors, analytical variation, and biological variation. Biological variation data for urinary protein: creatinine ratio (UPC) and urine specific gravity (USG) in cats are lacking.ObjectivesDetermine the biological variation of UPC and USG in cats.AnimalsEighty healthy client‐owned cats.MethodsProspective study. Urine was collected on days 0, 14, and 56 from all 80 cats to investigate the persistence of borderline or overt proteinuria or suboptimal urine concentration. In 15 of these cats, urine was collected weekly from day 0 to 42 to calculate the index of individuality (II) and reference change value (RCV), and on days 56 and 57 to evaluate day‐to‐day variability of UPC and USG.ResultsBorderline or overt proteinuria (UPC ≥0.2) was present in 18/80 (23%) cats at baseline and persisted on 3 occasions in 2 months in 8/18 (44%) cats. Urine concentration was suboptimal at inclusion (USG <1.035) in 8/80 (10%) cats and at all 3 time points during 2 months in 3/8 (38%) cats. The II of UPC and USG indicated intermediate individuality. The 1‐sided RCV was 82% for UPC and 36% for USG. Proteinuria substage was identical on 2 consecutive days in 13/15 (87%) cats, and urine concentrating ability remained the same in all 15 cats.Conclusions and Clinical ImportanceA >82% increase in UPC in a healthy cat is not solely attributable to physiological and analytical variation. For USG, a decrease of >36% is considered clinically relevant.

Funder

Bijzonder Onderzoeksfonds UGent

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

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