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Microalbuminuria Predicts Clinical Proteinuria and Early Mortality in Maturity-Onset Diabetes
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1984
Year
The study examined whether microalbuminuria predicts subsequent proteinuria and early mortality in type II diabetes patients. Researchers measured morning urine albumin by radioimmunoassay in 1973 among 50–75‑year‑old type II diabetics, followed 76 microalbuminuric patients over nine years, and compared them to controls and other diabetic groups while recording demographic and clinical variables. After nine years, patients with microalbuminuria were more likely to develop clinical proteinuria and had a 148% higher mortality than controls, confirming microalbuminuria as a predictor of adverse outcomes. Published in N Engl J Med 1984; 310:356–360.
We studied whether microalbuminuria (30 to 140 μg of albumin per milliliter) would predict the later development of increased proteinuria and early mortality in Type II diabetics. During 1973, morning urine specimens of diabetic clinic patients 50 to 75 years of age whose disease had been diagosed after the age of 45 were examined for albumin level by radioimmunoassay. Seventy-six patients with albumin concentrations of 30 to 140 μg per milliliter were identified for long-term follow-up. They were compared with normal controls, diabetic patients with lower albumin concentrations (75 patients with concentrations <15 μg per milliliter and 53 with concentrations of 16 to 29 μg per milliliter), and 28 diabetic patients with higher concentrations (>140). Age, duration of diabetes, treatment method, fasting blood glucose level, blood pressure, height, and weight were determined for the four diabetic groups. After nine years the group with albumin concentrations of 30 to 140 μg per milliliter was more likely to have clinically detectablle 5oteinuria (>400 μg per milliliter) than were the groups with lower concentrations. Mortality was 148 per cent higher in this group than in normal controls — comparable to the increase (116 per cent) in the group with heavy proteinuria (albumin levels >140 μg per milliliter). In addition, mortality was increased 76 per cent in the group with albumin levels of 16 to 29 μg per milliliter and 37 per cent in the group with levels below 15. We conclude that microalbuminuria in patients with Type II diabetes is predictive of clinical proteinuria and increased mortality. (N Engl J Med 1984; 310:356–60.)
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