Background: The criterion of a renal biopsy in children with asymptomatic persistent isolated proteinuria is controversial.
Methods: To determine an adequate renal biopsy criterion in children with asymptomatic constant isolated proteinuria, the optimal cutoff maximum urinary protein/creatinine ratio (uP/Cr) to separate minor glomerular abnormalities (MGA) and other significant glomerular changes was obtained by receiver operating characteristic analysis in 44 children with asymptomatic constant isolated proteinuria (uP/Cr ≥ 0.2 g/g) screened from 1167 patients who underwent a renal biopsy between September 2000 and April 2010. Patients were divided into two groups according to the cutoff value to verify its validity.
Results: The optimal uP/Cr was 0.5 g/g. In Group 1 (uP/Cr <0.5 g/g, n = 15), only one patient (6.7%) showed focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS) and the other 14 patients (93.3%) had MGA. In Group 2 (uP/Cr ≥ 0.5 g/g at least once before biopsy, n = 29), 5 patients showed FSGS and 7 patients had nephritis such as IgA nephropathy (41.4%, n = 12) and the other 17 patients (58.6%) showed MGA. These findings indicated that the ratio of non-MGA/MGA was significantly higher in Group 2 than that in Group 1 (P = 0.016) and that if renal biopsies were performed with a criterion of a maximum uP/Cr ≥ 0.5 g/g (criterion for Group 2), renal biopsies could be avoided in 45.2% of patients with MGA. One patient with FSGS in Group 1 showed proteinuria with uP/Cr ≥ 0.5 g/g in the clinical course.
Conclusions: An adequate renal biopsy criterion in children with asymptomatic constant isolated proteinuria is uP/Cr ≥ 0.5 g/g.