The aim of the study was to study the frequency and features of albuminuria in patients with chronic bronchoobstructive lung diseases. The prospective study involved 219 patients with COPD (GOLD 1-4) and 201 patients with persistent bronchial asthma (BA) of varying severity, who were examined in 2018-2019. The control group consisted of 48 volunteers, comparable in age and gender. In addition to General clinical studies, all patients were calculated BMI and visceral obesity detection based on the waist-hip ratio (WHR), and the Smoking index (HCI) was calculated. Albuminuria was determined based on the calculation of the albumin / creatinine ratio in a single morning portion of urine. The frequency of optimal / slightly elevated AU (A1) was 28,7% (63) among COPD patients and 9% (18) of BA patients. The number of COPD patients with clinically significant AU (A2, A3) was 24,2% (53) of patients, which is statistically significantly higher than among BA patients (5,5% of patients; χ2=22,3, p=0,01). The factors that make a statistically significant contribution to the development of AU in patients with COPD were the frequency of exacerbations over the previous 12 months, ICP, fibrinogen and CRP levels, FEV1; in BA patients – WHR, ICP. Smoking contributes to the development and potentiation of renal dysfunction in patients with bronchial obstructive diseases. The issue of considering BA as a risk factor for renal dysfunction remains controversial, given the diversity of BA both in terms of disease phenotypes, severity, and variety of therapeutic approaches.

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