Concentration of novel urinary tract infection biomarkers in neonates
Maria Jebbia, Sudipti Gupta, Brett G. Klamer, Leeann Pavlek, Christina B. Ching, Tahagod H. Mohamed, Brian Becknell

TL;DR
This study measures levels of two antimicrobial peptides in neonatal urine and finds they decrease with gestational age, suggesting potential use in diagnosing UTIs in newborns.
Contribution
The study defines baseline concentrations of RNase 7 and BD-1 in neonatal urine and their variation by gestational age.
Findings
RNase 7 and BD-1 are present in neonatal urine as early as 22 weeks gestation.
AMP concentrations decrease with increasing gestational age and birthweight.
Median RNase 7 and BD-1 levels were 271 ng/mg and 116 ng/mg, respectively, when normalized to creatinine.
Abstract
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a common comorbidity in hospitalized neonates. The current UTI diagnostics have several limitations including invasive collection of urinary samples to ensure sterility, risk of contamination and lack of consensus definitions of UTI based on urine culture. Antimicrobial peptides (AMPs) have been recently utilized as novel biomarkers that can efficiently and accurately diagnose pediatric UTI. However, the concentration of AMPs in neonatal urine is not well-defined. Urine from neonates admitted to a single level IV neonatal intensive care unit was obtained to determine baseline concentration of two AMPs, Ribonuclease 7 (RNase 7) and Beta Defensin-1 (BD-1) and to define the relationship between AMP concentration and gestational age (GA). AMP levels were normalized to urine creatinine. RNase 7 and BD-1 were expressed in neonatal urine (n = 66) regardless…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPediatric Urology and Nephrology Studies · Urinary Tract Infections Management · Urological Disorders and Treatments
