Reference range of urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin in very low-birth-weight infants: preliminary data

E Parravicini, JM Lorenz, SL Nemerofsky… - American journal of …, 2009 - thieme-connect.com
E Parravicini, JM Lorenz, SL Nemerofsky, M O'Rourke, J Barasch, D Bateman
American journal of perinatology, 2009thieme-connect.com
We sought to determine the reference range for urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated
lipocalin (UNGAL) in very low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants with uncomplicated clinical
courses. Samples of urine from 53 VLBW infants between 3 and 28 days of life were
prospectively collected weekly for measurement of UNGAL. A subset of 22 infants with
uncomplicated medical courses without risk factors for renal impairment was selected for
study. Mean±standard deviation and range for birth weight and gestational age of study …
Abstract
We sought to determine the reference range for urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (UNGAL) in very low-birth-weight (VLBW) infants with uncomplicated clinical courses. Samples of urine from 53 VLBW infants between 3 and 28 days of life were prospectively collected weekly for measurement of UNGAL. A subset of 22 infants with uncomplicated medical courses without risk factors for renal impairment was selected for study. Mean±standard deviation and range for birth weight and gestational age of study infants were 1156±191, 790 to 1440 g and 29±2, 27 to 33 weeks, respectively. The 95th and 99th percentiles for UNGAL concentration from this group of infants were 25 ng/mL and 75 ng/mL, respectively. Bootstrapped mean 95th and 99th percentile values and their standard errors and 95 percent confidence intervals in ng/mL were 33.1±13.0 (7.7, 58.6) and 67.5±15.1 (37.9, 97.1), respectively. These values fall within the adult reference range. UNGAL values were stable across the ranges of gestational and postnatal age of the study infants. A preliminary reference range for UNGAL in VLBW infants has been established. Further investigation with more frequent urine collections in a larger population of VLBW infants that includes those with birth weights< 750 g and gestational ages< 27 weeks is necessary to confirm this reference range.
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