Norbert Laube, Stefan Hergarten, Albrecht Hesse
Testing the Predictability of the Relative Urinary Supersaturation from the Bonn-Risk-Index for Calcium Oxalate Stone Formation
When introducing a new parameter, it is necessary to
compare the power of the new measure with already
established ones. For a new method it is quite difficult
to compete with established methods which have already
ascertained sets of data over many years. A formal
comparison of the new parameter with the actual
“gold-standard” method can be a useful approach to reduce
that problem. It cannot be expected that a new
measure would reflect the “gold-standard” method in a
simple proportionality. Therefore, it is important to find
out the accuracy of the prediction of one parameter
from the other, based on simple, e.g. linear, functions.
A number of methods exist to determine the crystallization
risk of calcium oxalate salts from urine. The
most established method is the calculation of the relative
urinary supersaturations with respect to these
salts using the EQUIL-program, a program computing
the equilibrium concentrations of complexes of primary
cations and anions commonly found in urine.
The Bonn-Risk-Index (BRI) is a new strategy for the
evaluation of the risk of calcium oxalate formation, by
performing crystallization experiments on native unprepared
urine samples. Although the analytical and
computational efforts of both approaches are quite different
(relative supersaturation = high, BRI = low), the
measurements revealed a considerable and significant
linear relationship between the relative urinary calcium
oxalate supersaturation, and BRI. We were,
therefore, interested in predicting the relative supersaturation
from the BRI and in the accuracy of this prediction.
Clinical Chemical Laboratory Medicine, Walter de Gruyter
Print ISSN: 1434-6621
Volume: 39, 10/2001
Pages: 966 - 969
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