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Urinary angiotensinogen as a biomarker for acute to chronic kidney injury transition – prognostic and mechanistic implications
Author(s) -
Katie Connor,
Laura Denby
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
clinical science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.91
H-Index - 138
eISSN - 1470-8736
pISSN - 0143-5221
DOI - 10.1042/cs20180795
Subject(s) - biomarker , acute kidney injury , medicine , acute tubular necrosis , kidney disease , urinary system , intensive care medicine , kidney , biology , biochemistry
Accurate biomarkers that both predict the progression to, and detect the early stages of chronic kidney disease (CKD) are lacking, resulting in difficulty in identifying individuals who could potentially benefit from targeted intervention. In a recent issue [ Clinical Science (2018) 132 , 2121-2133], Cui et al. examine the ability of urinary angiotensinogen (uAGT) to predict the progression of acute kidney injury (AKI) to CKD. They principally employ a murine ischaemia reperfusion injury model to study this and provide data from a small prospective study of patients with biopsy proven acute tubular necrosis. The authors suggest that uAGT is a dynamic marker of renal injury that could be used to predict the likelihood of structural recovery following AKI. Here we comment on their findings, exploring the clinical utility of uAGT as a biomarker to predict AKI to CKD transition and perhaps more controversially, to discuss whether the early renin-angiotensin system blockade following AKI represents a therapeutic target.

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