Casual urine specimens estimated 24-hour sodium excretion with population-level correlations of 0.79 (men) and 0.71 (women), and mean biases of -1.8 and 2.2 mmol/24h respectively.
Cross-Sectional (n=5,693)
Randomly assigned to test or validation data sets
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General population (n=5,693)
Casual (spot) urine specimens vs 24-hour urine collections
Correlation and bias between observed and estimated 24-hour sodium excretion
High intakes of dietary sodium are associated with elevated blood pressure levels and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. National and international guidelines recommend reduced sodium intake in the general population, which necessitates population-wide surveillance. We assessed the utility of casual (spot) urine specimens in estimating 24-hour urinary sodium excretion as a marker of sodium intake in the International Cooperative Study on Salt, Other Factors, and Blood Pressure. There were 5,693 participants recruited in 1984-1987 at the ages of 20-59 years from 29 North American and European samples. Participants were randomly assigned to test or validation data sets. Equations derived from casual urinary sodium concentration and other variables in the test data were applied to the validation data set. Correlations between observed and estimated 24-hour sodium excretion were 0.50 for individual men and 0.51 for individual women; the values were 0.79 and 0.71, respectively, for population samples. Bias in mean values (observed minus estimated) was small; for men and women, the values were -1.6 mmol per 24 hours and 2.3 mmol per 24 hours, respectively, at the individual level and -1.8 mmol per 24 hours and 2.2 mmol per 24 hours, respectively, at the population level. Proportions of individuals with urinary 24-hour sodium excretion above the recommended levels were slightly overestimated by the models. Casual urine specimens may be a useful, low-burden, low-cost alternative to 24-hour urine collections for estimation of population sodium intakes; ongoing calibration with study-specific 24-hour urinary collections is recommended to increase validity.
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Brown et al. (Tue,) conducted a cross-sectional in General population (n=5,693). Casual (spot) urine specimens vs. 24-hour urine collections was evaluated on Correlation and bias between observed and estimated 24-hour sodium excretion. Casual urine specimens estimated 24-hour sodium excretion with population-level correlations of 0.79 (men) and 0.71 (women), and mean biases of -1.8 and 2.2 mmol/24h respectively.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a126692965b75813866edd1 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwt066
Ian Brown
University of Kent
Alan R. Dyer
Preventive Cardiology
Queenie Chan
Amgen (United Kingdom)
American Journal of Epidemiology
Imperial College London
Medical Research Council
General Department of Preventive Medicine
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