Journal Information
Journal ID (publisher-id): BM
Journal ID (nlm-ta): Biochem Med
Title: Biochemia Medica
Abbreviated Title: Biochem. Med.
ISSN (print): 1330-0962
ISSN (electronic): 1846-7482
Publisher: Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine
Article Information
Copyright: 2016, Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry
Date received: 23 May 2016
Date accepted: 19 September 2016
Publication date (print and electronic): 15 October 2016
Volume: 26
Issue: 3
Pages: 421-430
Publisher ID: bm-26-421
DOI: 10.11613/BM.2016.044
Urinary orosomucoid: validation of an automated immune turbidimetric test and its possible clinical use
Introduction
Besides routine serum markers of inflammatory diseases, the diagnostic potential of selected urinary proteins has not been fully exploited yet. Former studies revealed that urinary orosomucoid (u-ORM) might have complementary information in inflammatory disorders. Our aim was to develop and validate a fully automated method for u-ORM measurements and to evaluate its potential clinical impact on systemic inflammatory diseases.
Materials and methods
A particle-enhanced immune turbidimetric assay was validated for a Cobas 8000/c502 analyzer to determine u-ORM levels. Spot urine samples from 72 healthy individuals, 28 patients with Crohn’s disease and 30 septic patients were studied.
Results
Our assay time was 10 minutes and the detection limit of u-ORM was 0.02 mg/L. The intra- and inter-assay imprecision expressed as CV was less than 5%, and the recovery ranged between 95–103%. Within 10 to 60 years of age, a preliminary reference range for urinary orosomucoid/creatinine ratio (u-ORM/u-CREAT) was found to be 0.08 (0.01–0.24) mg/mmol [median (2.5–97.5 percentiles)]. Compared to controls, a five-fold increase of u-ORM/u-CREAT values in Crohn’s disease and approximately a 240-fold increase in sepsis were observed.
Keywords: orosomucoid; urine; particle-enhanced turbidimetry; inflammation; biomarker