Validation of spot urine in estimating 24-h urinary sodium, potassium and sodium-to-potassium ratio during three different sodium diets in healthy adults

Publication date

2023-12

Authors

Groenland, Eline H
Vendeville, Jean Paul A.C.
Bots, Michiel LORCID 0000-0003-2871-9810ISNI 0000000391893395
Visseren, Frank L.J.ISNI 0000000389493675
Musson, RubenISNI 0000000394766869
Spiering, WilkoORCID 0000-0002-2493-6407

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Abstract

Purpose: To evaluate the validity of spot urine assay methods in estimating the 24-h urinary sodium, potassium and sodium-to-potassium ratio during three different sodium diets. Materials and methods: Twelve healthy volunteers were asked to adhere to 3 dietary sodium targets (3.3–5.0g/day,<3.3 g/day and >5.0 g/day) for three consecutive weeks and to measure salt excretion daily in spot urine samples using a self-monitoring device. On day 7 of each week, 24-h urine was collected to compare measured with estimated 24-h salt excretion (by the Kawasaki, Tanaka and INTERSALT equations). Results: Correlation coefficients relating measured and estimated 24-h sodium excretion were low and not significant for Kawasaki and INTERSALT and moderate for the Tanaka equation (τ 0.56–0.64,p<.05). Bland–Altman plots showed considerable differences between estimated and measured sodium excretion across all salt diets. Over 40% of the participants showed an absolute difference between measured and estimated 24-h sodium of more than 1000 mg/day. The correlation coefficients between 24-h and spot Na/K ratio were 0.67, 0.94 and 0.85(p<.05), and mean differences were 0.59, 0.06 and 0.48 for the intermediate, low and high sodium diets, respectively. Conclusion: These findings do not support estimation of individual 24-h salt excretion from spot urine by the Kawasaki, Tanaka, or INTERSALT formula. Plain language summary Accurate monitoring of salt intake is essential to improve BP control. At present, measurement of sodium and potassium excretion in multiple non-consecutive 24-h urinary collections is considered the gold standard for measuring dietary sodium intake. However, this method is burdensome, time-consuming and error prone. Therefore, we assessed and compared the validity of three formula-based approaches to estimate 24-h urinary sodium and potassium excretion and the Na/K ratio from spot urine samples measured by a self-monitoring device under three different sodium diets using 24-h urine collections as the reference. We conclude that use of three commonly used equations that estimate 24-h urinary sodium and potassium excretion result in substantial bias, poor precision and poor accuracy and are therefore not recommended. The Na/K ratio based on multiple casual urine samples may be a useful, low-burden, low-cost alternative method to 24-h urine collection for monitoring daily salt intake.

Keywords

24-h urine collection, INTERSALT, Kawasaki, self-monitoring, Sodium intake, sodium-to-potassium ratio, Tanaka, urinary salt excretion, Internal Medicine, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

Citation

Groenland, E H, Vendeville, J P A C, Bots, M L, Visseren, F L J, Musson, R E A & Spiering, W 2023, 'Validation of spot urine in estimating 24-h urinary sodium, potassium and sodium-to-potassium ratio during three different sodium diets in healthy adults', Blood pressure, vol. 32, no. 1, 2170868. https://doi.org/10.1080/08037051.2023.2170868