PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Urine Protein/Creatinine Ratios during Labor: A Prospective Observational Study.

  • Vaya W Tanamai,
  • Brandon-Luke L Seagle,
  • Judy Y Yeh,
  • Bethany Brady,
  • Corrie B Miller,
  • Salvador Sena,
  • Jessica Dodge,
  • Shohreh Shahabi,
  • Robert Samuelson,
  • Errol R Norwitz,
  • Guoyang Luo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0160453
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 8
p. e0160453

Abstract

Read online

To evaluate the utility of urine protein/creatinine ratio (uPCR) measurements among healthy parturients at term we performed a prospective cohort study at a community teaching hospital.Serial urine samples were collected. Ninety-three women contributed 284 urine samples. uPCRs were determined. Multiple imputation and paired sampled analysis was performed when appropriate.Two-thirds (63/93) of women had at least one measured uPCR ≥ 0.3. One-third (31/93) had a uPCR ≥ 0.3 at admission, including 39.1% (9/23) of women not in labor. Median (IQR) uPCRs increased during labor and after delivery: latent phase/no labor, 0.15 (0.06-0.32); active phase, 0.29 (0.10-0.58); early postpartum, 0.45 (0.18-1.36) (all p 0.3 in the immediate postpartum period (p < 0.01). Women who labored before cesarean delivery had the highest early postpartum uPCRs: median (IQR) 1.16 (0.39-1.80). A negative urine dipstick protein result did not exclude uPCR ≥ 0.3. uPCRs were similar when compared by method of urine collection.uPCR ≥ 0.3 is common among healthy women with uncomplicated pregnancies at term. uPCR increases during labor and is not a reliable measure of pathologic proteinuria at term or during the peripartum period.