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Article

Validation of albumin determined in urine with the HemoCue point‐of‐care analyser

Pages 119-126 | Received 13 Sep 2002, Accepted 31 Jan 2003, Published online: 08 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Albumin concentrations persistently between 20 and 200 mg/L in first morning spot urine or urine collected overnight, referred to as microalbuminuria, indicate incipient nephropathy in diabetes mellitus. This study validates a new point‐of‐care device, the HemoCue Urine Albumin analyser, for handling, accuracy precision and predictive values (PV±) at 20 mg/L. Over a period of 2 months, 200 microalbuminuria samples were selected at the Department of Clinical Chemistry according to the results from the Integra 700 instrument (Roche, R) and analysed on the same day using the HemoCue analyser (HemoCue, H) and the Immage instrument (Beckman, B), in all cases closely following the manufacturers' instructions. Only 137 results were within the measuring range of H, 10–150 mg/L. Comparisons yielded regression lines H=1.06R–7.2 (r2=0.94), H=1.08B–3.1 (r2=0.94) and R=1.00B+4.3 (r2=0.99). Inter‐assay (n=24) CV% at 12 mg/L was H=18.2, R=4.2 and B=2.9 and at 65 mg/L: H=6.1, R=1.8 and B=2.6. Intra‐assay duplicate CV% for H at 21–40 mg/L was 13.2, at 41–80 mg/L 10.8 and at 81–150 mg/L 9.2. Intra‐assay repeatability (n=8) CV% at 28 mg/L was 7.2–13.8, at 57 mg/L 6.4–8.4 and at 105 mg/L 4.3–7.1. External quality assurance urine albumin (B) was +5.7% cf. nephelometry and (R) +1.0% cf. turbidimetry (n=6) method–group means. PV± values were (H versus R) 0.98/0.37 and (H versus B) 0.95/0.65. HemoCue is easy to handle. Results below 20 mg/L need to be confirmed at the central laboratory to exclude microalbuminuria. Values above 20 mg/L can be used to follow microalbuminuria, as precision allows discerning steps of 10 mg/L.

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