Microalbuminuria is an important biomarker for the development of diabetic nephropathy and cardiovascular complications. Since microalbuminuria is not easily detected on routine urinalysis, current guidelines recommend measuring spot urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio (uACR) annually in a patient with diabetes mellitus. While the standard method is quantitative measurement using turbidimetric immunoassay, it requires high cost and special laboratory equipment. This may be a hurdle that prevents screening for microalbuminuria in many patients with diabetes. Therefore, a semi-quantitative uACR test, which is rapid and inexpensive, could be used as a substitute to the current standard quantitative measurement. The investigators aimed to assess the diagnostic accuracy of a semi-quantitative urine albumin-to-creatinine ratio test, URiSCAN 2ACR, as a screening tool for microalbuminuria in patients with diabetes.
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Diagnostic Sensitivity and Specificity
Timeframe: through study completion, an average of 18 months