Practical Laboratory Medicine (Aug 2023)
Comparison of the clinical performance of the Atyp.C parameter of the UF-5000 fully automated urine particle analyzer with that of microscopic urine sediment analysis
Abstract
a) Objectives: Urinalysis is one of the most common laboratory screening tests to detect problems in the renal and urinary system; however, they cannot detect atypical cells (Atyp.Cs). The Sysmex UF-5000, a fully automated urine particle analyzer, can detect Atyp.Cs via its Atyp.C parameter. This study aimed to compare the clinical value of the Atyp.C parameter with that of urine sediment microscopy. b) Method: A total of 471 leftover urine samples were submitted to the Department of Clinical Laboratory at the University of Tokyo Hospital for urinalysis by manual sediment microscopy examination and UF-5000 Atyp.C analysis. c) Result: Of 471 submitted samples, 117 were positive for Atyp.Cs by urine sediment and 354 samples were negative. The histological subtypes of the Atyp.Cs included 105 cases of suspected urothelial carcinoma cells, 10 suspected squamous carcinoma cells, and 2 of suspected adenocarcinoma cells. The Atyp.C values for the Atyp.C-positive and -negative groups were 2.64 ± 0.69 and 0.38 ± 0.16, respectively. The optimal Atyp.C cutoff value determined by the receiver operating characteristic curve analysis was 0.4/μL. The area under the curve was 0.856, with a sensitivity of 79.5% and specificity of 85.1%. Atyp.C values of the UF-5000 showed high predictive performance for Atyp.C-positive specimens identified by urine sediment microscopy. d) Conclusions: This study shows that a combination of UF-5000 analysis and microscopic examination of urine sediment improves Atyp.C detection in urine sediment analysis. These results suggest that Atyp.C measured by UF-5000 could be a useful screening parameter in routine testing of urine samples.