Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Urine cauxin levels in older cats and kidney disease risk
By Jepson, Rosanne E et al.·Published in American journal of veterinary research·2010·Department of Veterinary Clinical Science, United Kingdom·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Measurement of urinary cauxin in geriatric cats with variable plasma creatinine concentrations and proteinuria and evaluation of urine cauxin-to-creatinine concentration ratio as a predictor of developing azotemia.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of geriatric cats, aged 9 years and older, were studied to see if a specific urine test could predict kidney problems. These cats had varying levels of kidney function and protein in their urine. Researchers found that while the urine cauxin-to-creatinine concentration ratio (UC/C) did not change with kidney disease severity, higher UC/C values were linked to a greater risk of developing kidney issues over time. Unfortunately, this test may not provide much extra information compared to existing tests for kidney health.
People also search for: cat kidney disease symptoms · geriatric cat protein in urine · urine test for cat kidney problems
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate urine cauxin immunoreactivity in geriatric cats with variable plasma creatinine concentrations and proteinuria and to assess urinary cauxin-to-creatinine concentration ratio (UC/C) as a predictor of developing azotemia. ANIMALS: 188 client-owned geriatric (>or= 9 years of age) cats. PROCEDURES: A direct immunoassay was developed and validated for the quantification of urinary cauxin relative to a standard curve generated from a urine sample with high cauxin immunoreactivity. Relationships among UC/C, plasma creatinine concentration, and proteinuria were assessed. Nonazotemic cats were recruited and followed for 12 months. Urinary cauxin-to-creatinine concentration ratio was evaluated as a predictor of development of azotemia in these cats. RESULTS: No relationship was evident between UC/C and plasma creatinine concentration. A weak positive correlation was identified between UC/C and urine protein-to-creatinine concentration ratio (r = 0.212). At entry to the longitudinal study, those cats that later developed azotemia had a UC/C that was significantly higher than in those remaining nonazotemic after 12 months. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: The UC/C did not vary with severity of azotemia but appeared contributory to the feline urinary proteome. High UC/C values were predictive of the geriatric cats in our study developing azotemia. However, it seems unlikely that UC/C will provide additional information about the measurement of urine protein-to-creatinine concentration ratio as a biomarker for the development of azotemia in cats.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20673100/