4.5 Article

Urinary Biomarkers of Renal Injury KIM-1 and NGAL: Reference Intervals for Healthy Pediatric Population in Sri Lanka

Journal

CHILDREN-BASEL
Volume 8, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/children8080684

Keywords

KIM-1; NGAL; children; CKDu; Sri Lanka; kidney biomarkers

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Funding

  1. Accelerating Higher Education Expansion and Development (AHEAD) Operation of the Ministry of Higher Education - World Bank [AHEAD DOR 02/40]
  2. Duke Global Health Pilot Grant

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This study aimed to determine reference intervals for KIM-1 and NGAL in a pediatric population in Sri Lanka affected by CKDu. The findings provide valuable information for screening and detecting early renal damage in rural communities impacted by CKDu.
Emerging renal biomarkers (e.g., kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL)) are thought to be highly sensitive in diagnosing renal injury. However, global data on reference intervals for emerging biomarkers in younger populations are lacking. Here, we aimed to determine reference intervals for KIM-1 and NGAL across a pediatric population in Sri Lanka; a country significantly impacted by the emergence of chronic kidney disease of unexplained etiology (CKDu). Urine samples were collected from children (10-18 years) with no prior record of renal diseases from the dry climatic zone of Sri Lanka (N = 909). Urinary KIM-1 and NGAL concentrations were determined using the enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and adjusted to urinary creatinine. Biomarker levels were stratified by age and gender, and reference intervals derived with quantile regression (2.5th, 50th, and 97.5th quantiles) were expressed at 95% CI. The range of median reference intervals for urinary KIM-1 and NGAL in children were 0.081-0.426 ng/mg Cr, 2.966-4.850 ng/mg Cr for males, and 0.0780-0.5076 ng/mg Cr, 2.0850-3.4960 ng/mg Cr for females, respectively. Renal biomarkers showed weak correlations with age, gender, ACR, and BMI. Our findings provide reference intervals to facilitate screening to detect early renal damage, especially in rural communities that are impacted by CKDu.

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