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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Indoxyl sulfate blood levels predict kidney disease worsening in dogs

By Chen, C N et al.·Published in Veterinary journal (London, England : 1997)·2018·Institute of Veterinary Clinical Science·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Plasma indoxyl sulfate concentration predicts progression of chronic kidney disease in dogs and cats.

Plain-English summary

A study found that higher levels of a toxin called indoxyl sulfate in the blood can help predict how quickly chronic kidney disease (CKD) will worsen in dogs and cats. Researchers looked at 36 dogs and 58 cats with CKD and discovered that those with elevated indoxyl sulfate levels were more likely to experience a decline in kidney function over time. This toxin's levels were particularly significant in cats, correlating with other markers of kidney health. Monitoring indoxyl sulfate could help veterinarians assess the risk of progression in pets with CKD and tailor treatment plans accordingly.

People also search for: dog chronic kidney disease symptoms · cat kidney disease progression · indoxyl sulfate in dogs · chronic kidney disease treatment for pets

Abstract

Indoxyl sulfate is a protein-bound uremic toxin that increases as the severity of impaired renal function increases in humans, laboratory animals, dogs and cats. An elevation of indoxyl sulfate is related to prognosis among people with chronic kidney disease. However, whether indoxyl sulfate is able to predict the progression of chronic kidney disease in dogs and cats has not been previously studied. In the present study, 58 cats and 36 dogs with chronic kidney disease were enrolled. Plasma indoxyl sulfate was measured by high performance liquid chromatography. Renal progression was defined as an increase by one International Renal Interest Society (IRIS) stage and/or a rise in serum creatinine concentration of 0.5mg/dL during the same stage within a 3-month period. Compared with the non-progression groups, across different stages of renal failure, the baseline plasma indoxyl sulfate concentration was increased in the renal progression group (P<0.05), especially for IRIS stages 2 and 3 animals. The area under the receiver operator characteristic curves of indoxyl sulfate, when predicting renal progression, was above 0.75 for both dogs and cats. Indoxyl sulfate concentrations were also correlated with the increase of blood urea nitrogen, serum creatinine, and phosphate and the decrease of hematocrit among cats; while in dogs, concentrations were only correlated with the increase of phosphate concentrations. Indoxyl sulfate served as a biomarker of progression risk in dogs and cats with chronic kidney disease.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29428089/