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Missing Urine Tests Increases Risk for Chronic Kidney Disease

Researchers discovered that those with hypertension or diabetes are usually not given a urine test to screen for chronic kidney disease, despite being high-risk.

chronic kidney disease

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By Erin McNemar, MPA

- Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health researchers found that despite people with hypertension or diabetes having an increased risk of chronic kidney disease, individuals are typically not given a urine test to screen for the disease.

Researchers analyzed data on almost four million hypertension and diabetes patients around the world. Through the study, the team discovered that only about 4 percent of those with hypertension and 35 percent of those with diabetes had been screened for chronic kidney disease with an albuminuria test, a standard measure of protein in the urine.

“These results highlight the need to widen albuminuria testing for early detection of chronic kidney diseases—especially now that we have new and more effective treatments that could benefit these patients,” study first author Jung-Im Shin, MD, said in a press release.