Background and aims: There is an ongoing need to recognize early kidney injury and its progression in structural chronic pathologies. The proteins neutrophil-gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), insulin-like growth factor-binding protein 7 (IGFBP7), tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases 2 (TIMP2), kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1), C-X-C motif chemokine 9 (CXCL9), transforming growth factor-beta 1 (TGF-β1), solute carrier family 22 member 2 (SLC22A2), nephrin, cubilin, and uromodulin (UMOD) have been proposed as early kidney injury biomarkers. To guide clinical interpretation, their urinary concentrations should be accompanied by reference intervals, which we here establish in a representative Dutch middle-aged population.
Materials and methods: The 24 h urine samples from 1443 Caucasian middle-aged men and women were analyzed for the biomarkers by quantitative LC-MS/MS. Biomarker excretion per 24 h were calculated, and urine creatinine and osmolality were measured for dilution normalization. This population was characterized by demographic and anthropometric parameters, comorbid conditions, and conventional kidney function measures.
Results: NGAL, IGFBP7, TIMP2, KIM-1, and UMOD could be quantified in this population, whereas nephrin, SLC22A2, and CXCL9 were below their detection limits. Urine creatinine and osmolality were correlated to urine volume (r = -0.71; -0.74) and to IGFBP7 (r = 0.73; 0.71) and TIMP2 (r = 0.71; 0.69). Crude and normalized biomarker concentrations were affected by sex, but not by age, body mass index, smoking, kidney function, or common comorbid conditions. The reference intervals (men; women) were 18-108; 21-131 pmol IGFBP7/mmol creatinine, 1-63; 4-224 pmol NGAL/mmol creatinine, 7-48; 7-59 pmol TIMP2/mmol creatinine, <1-9; <1-12 pmol KIM-1/mmol creatinine, and 0.1-1.2; 0.1-1.7 mg UMOD/mmol creatinine.
Conclusion: We present dilution-normalized and sex-stratified urinary reference intervals of kidney injury biomarkers in a middle-aged Caucasian population.
Keywords: Reference intervals; clinical protein mass spectrometry; dilution-normalization; kidney injury biomarkers; urine.