Korean J Nephrol.  2011 Jul;30(4):368-376.

Clinical outcomes of Asymptomatic Urinary Abnormalities in Adults

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Internal Medicine, Keimyung University School of Medicine, Korea. sbpark@dsmc.or.kr
  • 2Department of Pathology, Keimyung University School of Medicine, Korea.
  • 3Kidney Institute, Keimyung University School of Medicine, Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
Urinalysis is one of the best methods for early detection of renal disease and recent wide- spread use of mass screening led to increasing prevalence of asymptomatic urinary abnormalities. Usually, primary chronic glomerulonephritis first presents with asymptomatic urinary abnormalities and chronic glomerulonephritis commonly causes end-stage renal disease. However, clinical outcome of asymptomatic urinary abnormalities in adults is not well known.
METHODS
Between Jan 1995 to Aug 2009, 333 patients with asymptomatic urinary abnormalities who underwent percutaneous renal biopsy were enrolled. A retrospective study was performed to clarify the prognostic factors and the long-term renal outcome of this disease.
RESULTS
According to clinical manifestation, there were 79 (23.7%) of isolated microscopic hematuria, 30 (9.0%) of isolated proteinuria and 224 (67.3%) of mixed hematuria and proteinuria. The patients were significantly younger in case with microscopic hematuria. Group with microscopic hematuria had significantly shorter follow up period (p=0.013). In pathologic diagnosis, IgA nephropathy was most common with 244 patients (73.3%). The proteinuria group and mixed group showed significantly higher rate of progression to chronic renal failure than the microscopic hematuria group (p=0.015). The group that 24-hour proteinuria was more than 0.5 g/day showed significantly higher progression rate to chronic renal failure (p<0.000). Using univariate regression analysis, 3 risk factors for progression to chronic renal failure were identified: age, serum creatinine, 24-hour total urine protein. In multivariate regression analysis, only 24-hour proteinuria was the independent prognostic factor for progression to chronic renal failure.
CONCLUSION
IgA nephropathy is the most common cause of asymptomatic urinary abnormalities in adults. The group of proteinuria has higher progression rate to chronic renal failure than other groups. Over 0.5 gm of 24-hour proteinuria is a significant risk factor for progression to chronic renal failure in multivariate regression analysis.

Keyword

Proteinuria; Hematuria; Renal failure; Chronic

MeSH Terms

Adult
Biopsy
Creatinine
Follow-Up Studies
Glomerulonephritis
Glomerulonephritis, IGA
Hematuria
Humans
Kidney Failure, Chronic
Mass Screening
Prevalence
Proteinuria
Renal Insufficiency
Retrospective Studies
Risk Factors
Urinalysis
Creatinine
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