Until diabetic kidney disease is severe, most people with it don't have symptoms. Having your kidney function checked by a simple blood and urine test is the only way to know if there are problems. Normal kidneys don't leak protein. But with kidney disease, protein shows up in your urine. Albumin is the most common protein in the blood. Albumin leaks into the urine with kidney disease. Increasing albumin in urine (called albuminuria) is a sign that the kidneys are less able to filter. It also is linked to worsening heart and blood vessels problems in people with diabetes.
A routine urine dipstick test doesn't pick up albuminuria until you are leaking more than 300 to 500 mg a day. This used to be referred to as macroalbuminuria. It's now also called severely increased albuminuria. For amounts less than 300 mg a day, the term is moderately increased albuminuria. This change in wording shows that any amount of protein in the urine is abnormal.
It is rare for kidney failure to happen in the first 10 years of diabetes. Kidney failure often happens 15 to 25 years after the first symptoms of diabetes. If you have had diabetes for more than 25 years without any signs of kidney failure, your risk of having it decreases.