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Title: Urinary albumin excretion: a predictor of glomerular findings in adults with microscopic haematuria. Author: Eardley KS, Ferreira MA, Howie AJ, Gosling P, Lipkin GW. Journal: QJM; 2004 May; 97(5):297-301. PubMed ID: 15100424. Abstract: BACKGROUND: Microscopic haematuria without proteinuria is a common clinical finding. When urological causes are excluded, usual findings on renal biopsy are IgA nephropathy (which can progress to end-stage renal failure) or thin basement membrane nephropathy (which has an excellent prognosis). A non-invasive test to discriminate between the two would be useful. AIM: To examine the value of measurement of urinary albumin excretion in discriminating glomerular causes of microscopic haematuria in patients without proteinuria on urine dipstick tests. DESIGN: Single-centre retrospective cross-sectional observational study. METHODS: Adult patients who underwent renal biopsy for microscopic haematuria over a 6-year period from January 1994 were identified. Study entry required normal renal function, no proteinuria detected by dipstick, and urinary albumin excretion <300 mg/24 h. Patients with IgA nephropathy had follow-up for a mean of 58 months after biopsy. RESULTS: Of 169 patients fulfilling study criteria, 119 (70%) had normoalbuminuria (<30 mg/24 h); 52 (30%) had microalbuminuria (30-299 mg/24 h). Of those with normoalbuminuria, 106 (89%) had thin basement membrane nephropathy or no glomerular abnormality. Thirteen (11%) had IgA nephropathy, and of 12 of these followed-up for a mean 64 months, none developed overt, dipstick-positive proteinuria. In contrast, 24 (48%) of those with microalbuminuria had IgA nephropathy, and of 22 followed-up for a mean 55 months, five developed overt proteinuria. DISCUSSION: Urinary albumin excretion is an indicator of likely glomerular findings in microscopic haematuria, and may influence whether a renal biopsy is necessary.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]