Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations

© 2019, Springer Nature Limited. Repeated 24-hour urine collection is considered to be the gold standard for assessing salt intake. This is often impractical in large-population studies, especially in low–middle-income countries. Equations to estimate 24-hour urinary salt excretion from a spot urin...

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Main Authors: Karen Charlton, Lisa J. Ware, Glory Chidumwa, Marike Cockeran, Aletta E. Schutte, Nirmala Naidoo, Paul Kowal
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Published: 2019
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-658322019-08-05T04:42:02Z Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations Karen Charlton Lisa J. Ware Glory Chidumwa Marike Cockeran Aletta E. Schutte Nirmala Naidoo Paul Kowal Medicine © 2019, Springer Nature Limited. Repeated 24-hour urine collection is considered to be the gold standard for assessing salt intake. This is often impractical in large-population studies, especially in low–middle-income countries. Equations to estimate 24-hour urinary salt excretion from a spot urine sample have been developed, but have not been widely validated in African populations. This study aimed to systematically assess the validity of four existing equations to predict 24-hour urinary sodium excretion (24UNa) from spot urine samples in a nationally representative sample of South Africans. Spot and 24-hour urine samples were collected in a subsample (n = 438) of participants from the World Health Organisation Study on global AGEing and adult health (SAGE) Wave 2 in South Africa in 2015. Measured 24UNa values were compared with predicted 24UNa values from the Kawasaki, Tanaka, INTERSALT and Mage equations using Bland–Altman plots. In this subsample (mean age 52.8 ± 16.4 years; body mass index 30.2 ± 8.2 kg/m 2 ; 76% female; 73% black African; 42% hypertensive), all four equations produced a significantly different population estimate compared with the measured median value of 6.7 g salt/day (IQR 4.4–10.5). Although INTERSALT underestimated salt intake (−3.77 g/d; −1.64 to −7.09), the other equations overestimated by 1.28 g/d (−3.52; 1.97), 6.24 g/d (2.22; 9.45), and 17.18 g/d (8.42; 31.96) for Tanaka, Kawasaki, and Mage, respectively. Bland–Altman curves indicated unacceptably wide levels of agreement. Use of these equations to estimate population level salt intake from spot urine samples in South Africans is not recommended. 2019-08-05T04:42:02Z 2019-08-05T04:42:02Z 2019-01-01 Journal 14765527 09509240 2-s2.0-85065784420 10.1038/s41371-019-0210-2 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85065784420&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/65832
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Karen Charlton
Lisa J. Ware
Glory Chidumwa
Marike Cockeran
Aletta E. Schutte
Nirmala Naidoo
Paul Kowal
Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations
description © 2019, Springer Nature Limited. Repeated 24-hour urine collection is considered to be the gold standard for assessing salt intake. This is often impractical in large-population studies, especially in low–middle-income countries. Equations to estimate 24-hour urinary salt excretion from a spot urine sample have been developed, but have not been widely validated in African populations. This study aimed to systematically assess the validity of four existing equations to predict 24-hour urinary sodium excretion (24UNa) from spot urine samples in a nationally representative sample of South Africans. Spot and 24-hour urine samples were collected in a subsample (n = 438) of participants from the World Health Organisation Study on global AGEing and adult health (SAGE) Wave 2 in South Africa in 2015. Measured 24UNa values were compared with predicted 24UNa values from the Kawasaki, Tanaka, INTERSALT and Mage equations using Bland–Altman plots. In this subsample (mean age 52.8 ± 16.4 years; body mass index 30.2 ± 8.2 kg/m 2 ; 76% female; 73% black African; 42% hypertensive), all four equations produced a significantly different population estimate compared with the measured median value of 6.7 g salt/day (IQR 4.4–10.5). Although INTERSALT underestimated salt intake (−3.77 g/d; −1.64 to −7.09), the other equations overestimated by 1.28 g/d (−3.52; 1.97), 6.24 g/d (2.22; 9.45), and 17.18 g/d (8.42; 31.96) for Tanaka, Kawasaki, and Mage, respectively. Bland–Altman curves indicated unacceptably wide levels of agreement. Use of these equations to estimate population level salt intake from spot urine samples in South Africans is not recommended.
format Journal
author Karen Charlton
Lisa J. Ware
Glory Chidumwa
Marike Cockeran
Aletta E. Schutte
Nirmala Naidoo
Paul Kowal
author_facet Karen Charlton
Lisa J. Ware
Glory Chidumwa
Marike Cockeran
Aletta E. Schutte
Nirmala Naidoo
Paul Kowal
author_sort Karen Charlton
title Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations
title_short Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations
title_full Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations
title_fullStr Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations
title_full_unstemmed Prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in South African adults: a comparison of four equations
title_sort prediction of 24-hour sodium excretion from spot urine samples in south african adults: a comparison of four equations
publishDate 2019
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85065784420&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/65832
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