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Multicentric validation of proteomic biomarkers in urine specific for diabetic nephropathy

Alaa Alkhalaf, Petra Zürbig, Stephan J L Bakker, Henk J G Bilo, Marie Cerna, Christine Fischer, Sebastian Fuchs, Bart Janssen, Karel Medek, Harald Mischak, Johannes M Roob, Kasper Rossing, Peter Rossing, Ivan Rychlík, Harald Sourij, Beate Tiran, Brigitte M Winklhofer-Roob, Gerjan J Navis, PREDICTIONS Group

    117 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    BACKGROUND: Urine proteome analysis is rapidly emerging as a tool for diagnosis and prognosis in disease states. For diagnosis of diabetic nephropathy (DN), urinary proteome analysis was successfully applied in a pilot study. The validity of the previously established proteomic biomarkers with respect to the diagnostic and prognostic potential was assessed on a separate set of patients recruited at three different European centers. In this case-control study of 148 Caucasian patients with diabetes mellitus type 2 and duration ≥5 years, cases of DN were defined as albuminuria >300 mg/d and diabetic retinopathy (n = 66). Controls were matched for gender and diabetes duration (n = 82).

    METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Proteome analysis was performed blinded using high-resolution capillary electrophoresis coupled with mass spectrometry (CE-MS). Data were evaluated employing the previously developed model for DN. Upon unblinding, the model for DN showed 93.8% sensitivity and 91.4% specificity, with an AUC of 0.948 (95% CI 0.898-0.978). Of 65 previously identified peptides, 60 were significantly different between cases and controls of this study. In <10% of cases and controls classification by proteome analysis not entirely resulted in the expected clinical outcome. Analysis of patient's subsequent clinical course revealed later progression to DN in some of the false positive classified DN control patients.

    CONCLUSIONS: These data provide the first independent confirmation that profiling of the urinary proteome by CE-MS can adequately identify subjects with DN, supporting the generalizability of this approach. The data further establish urinary collagen fragments as biomarkers for diabetes-induced renal damage that may serve as earlier and more specific biomarkers than the currently used urinary albumin.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalP L o S One
    Volume5
    Issue number10
    Pages (from-to)e13421
    ISSN1932-6203
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 20 Oct 2010

    Keywords

    • Biomarkers
    • Case-Control Studies
    • Diabetic Nephropathies
    • Electrophoresis, Capillary
    • Humans
    • Limit of Detection
    • Mass Spectrometry
    • Proteomics
    • Journal Article
    • Multicenter Study
    • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
    • Validation Studies

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