Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections

BACKGROUND: Dengue is the most important arboviral infection of humans. Following an initial febrile period, a small proportion of infected patients develop a vasculopathy, with children at particular risk for severe vascular leakage and shock. Differentiation between dengue and other common childho...

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1. Verfasser: Simmons, Cameron
Format: Journal Article
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: 2018
Online-Zugang:https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/170
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author Simmons, Cameron
author_browse Simmons, Cameron
author_facet Simmons, Cameron
author_sort Simmons, Cameron
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description BACKGROUND: Dengue is the most important arboviral infection of humans. Following an initial febrile period, a small proportion of infected patients develop a vasculopathy, with children at particular risk for severe vascular leakage and shock. Differentiation between dengue and other common childhood illnesses is difficult during the early febrile phase, and risk prediction for development of shock is poor. The presence of microalbuminuria is recognized as a useful early predictor for subsequent complications in a number of other disorders with vascular involvement. Significant proteinuria occurs in association with dengue shock syndrome and it is possible that early-phase microalbuminuria may be helpful both for diagnosis of dengue and for identification of patients likely to develop severe disease. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We measured formal urine albumin to creatinine ratios (UACRs) in daily samples obtained from a large cohort of children with suspected dengue recruited at two outpatient clinics in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Although UACRs were increased in the 465 confirmed dengue patients, with a significant time trend showing peak values around the critical period for dengue-associated plasma leakage, urine albumin excretion was also increased in the comparison group of 391 patients with other febrile illnesses (OFI). The dengue patients generally had higher UACRs than the OFI patients, but microalbuminuria, using the conventional cutoff of 30 mg albumin/g creatinine discriminated poorly between the two diagnostic groups in the early febrile phase. Secondly UACRs did not prove useful in predicting either development of warning signs for severe dengue or need for hospitalization. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Low-level albuminuria is common, even in relatively mild dengue infections, but is also present in many OFIs. Simple point-of-care UACR tests are unlikely to be useful for early diagnosis or risk prediction in dengue endemic areas.
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spelling oai:localhost:123456789-1702021-04-07T16:30:08Z Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections Simmons, Cameron BACKGROUND: Dengue is the most important arboviral infection of humans. Following an initial febrile period, a small proportion of infected patients develop a vasculopathy, with children at particular risk for severe vascular leakage and shock. Differentiation between dengue and other common childhood illnesses is difficult during the early febrile phase, and risk prediction for development of shock is poor. The presence of microalbuminuria is recognized as a useful early predictor for subsequent complications in a number of other disorders with vascular involvement. Significant proteinuria occurs in association with dengue shock syndrome and it is possible that early-phase microalbuminuria may be helpful both for diagnosis of dengue and for identification of patients likely to develop severe disease. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We measured formal urine albumin to creatinine ratios (UACRs) in daily samples obtained from a large cohort of children with suspected dengue recruited at two outpatient clinics in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. Although UACRs were increased in the 465 confirmed dengue patients, with a significant time trend showing peak values around the critical period for dengue-associated plasma leakage, urine albumin excretion was also increased in the comparison group of 391 patients with other febrile illnesses (OFI). The dengue patients generally had higher UACRs than the OFI patients, but microalbuminuria, using the conventional cutoff of 30 mg albumin/g creatinine discriminated poorly between the two diagnostic groups in the early febrile phase. Secondly UACRs did not prove useful in predicting either development of warning signs for severe dengue or need for hospitalization. CONCLUSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Low-level albuminuria is common, even in relatively mild dengue infections, but is also present in many OFIs. Simple point-of-care UACR tests are unlikely to be useful for early diagnosis or risk prediction in dengue endemic areas. 2018-09-14T11:15:02Z 2015-11-24T00:17:46Z 2018-09-14T11:15:02Z 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2012-12-13 2013-01-22 Journal Article https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/170 English
spellingShingle Simmons, Cameron
Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections
title Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections
title_full Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections
title_fullStr Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections
title_short Assessment of Microalbuminuria for Early Diagnosis and Risk Prediction in Dengue Infections
title_sort assessment of microalbuminuria for early diagnosis and risk prediction in dengue infections
url https://demo7.dspace.org/handle/123456789/170
work_keys_str_mv AT simmonscameron assessmentofmicroalbuminuriaforearlydiagnosisandriskpredictionindengueinfections