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Research Article

Clinical metabolomics and urinary NGAL for the early prediction of chronic kidney disease in healthy adults born ELBW

, , , , , , , & show all
Pages 40-43 | Published online: 25 Jul 2011
 

Abstract

Background: Clinical metabolomics is a recent “omic” technology which is defined as a global holistic overview of the personal metabolic status (fingerprinting). This technique allows to prove metabolic differences in different groups of people with the opportunity to explore interactions such as genotype-phenotype and genotype-environment type, whether normal or pathological. Aim: To study chronic kidney injury 1) using urine metabolomic profiles of young adults born extremely low-birth weight (ELBW) and 2) correlating a biomarker of kidney injury, urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL), in order to confirm the metabolomic injury profile. Method: Urine samples were collected from a group of 18 people (mean: 24-year-old, std: 4.27) who were born with ELBW and a group of 13 who were born at term appropriate for gestational age (AGA) as control (mean 25-year-old, std: 5.15). Urine samples were analyzed by 1H-nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and then submitted to unsupervised and supervised multivariate analysis. Urine NGAL (uNGAL) was measured using ARCHITECT (ABBOTT diagnostic NGAL kit). Results: With a multivariate approach and using a supervised analysis method, PLS-DA, (partial least squares discriminant analysis) we could correlate ELBW metabolic profiles with uNGAL concentration. Conversely, uNGAL could not be correlated to AGA. Conclusions: This study demonstrates the relevance of the metabolomic technique as a predictive tool of the metabolic status of exELBW. This was confirmed by the use of uNGAL as a biomarker which may predict a subclinical pathological process in the kidney such as chronic kidney disease.

Declaration of interest: Authors have no conflict of interest to declare

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