Renal transplant patients receive several immunosuppressive drug regimens that are potentially nephrotoxic for treatment. Serum creatinine is the standard for monitoring kidney function; however, cystatin C (Cys C) and kidney injury molecule-1 (KIM-1) have been found to indicate kidney injury earlier than serum creatinine and provide a better reflection of kidney function. Here, we assessed Cys C and KIM-1 serum levels in renal transplant patients receiving mycophenolate mofetil, tacrolimus, sirolimus, everolimus, or cyclosporine to evaluate kidney function. We used both the Chronic Kidney Disease Epidemiology Collaboration (CKD-EPI) 2021 equation, which is based on creatinine and combined creatinine with Cys C, and the CKD-EPI 2012 equation, which is based on Cys C alone, to estimate glomerular filtration rate (GFR). Then, we assessed the association between serum KIM-1 and GFR < 90 mL per minute per 1.73 m
2
. We observed significantly higher serum Cys C levels in patients with the elevated serum creatinine, compared with those with normal serum creatinine. The estimated GFRs based on creatinine were significantly higher than those based on the other equations, while a significant positive correlation was observed among all equations. Serum KIM-1 levels were negatively correlated with the estimated GFRs by the CKD-EPI Cys C and the combined creatinine with Cys C equations. A serum KIM-1 level above 0.71 ng/mL is likely to indicate GFR < 90 mL per minute per 1.73 m
2
. We observed a significant correlation between serum creatinine and Cys C in our renal transplant patients. Therefore, serum KIM-1 may be used to monitor renal function when using potentially nephrotoxic drugs in renal transplants.
animals. Correspondingly, metabolic profiles from both HCC groups with and without norfloxin were similar in character with the norfloxin treated group showing a slightly weaker set of metabolic alterations. Conclusion The spectral profiles of plasma in rats with HCC display marked changes with relation to lipid metabolism and cellular turnover which may indicate a fundamental repression of fatty acid oxidation and cancer cachexia. Norfloxacin appears to abrogate these effects slightly. This is the first animal model plasma 1 H NMR study to report such findings and may both be translational to human disease and allow the study of the effect metabolic modulation upon HCC progression.
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