Gregory A Kline, Erik S Venos, David Campbell, Alexander A Leung, Dennis Orton
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: Twenty-four-hour urine-free cortisol (UFC) is a first-line test for Cushing syndrome (CS). A new mass spectrometry assay for UFC requires a validated, relevant reference range appropriate to a screening population.
Design: Combined retrospective and prospective cohort study in a government health system and tertiary endocrinology clinic, Canada. Participants were patients with potential features of CS.
Methods: The refineR reference interval algorithm was used to derive a middle 95%ile reference interval from 4830 UFC results in non-CS patients, compared with 120 prospective patients where evaluation excluded CS.
Results: Urine-free cortisol and 24-h urine volume were correlated (r = 0.28, P < .0001). There was no significant difference between the volume-corrected UFC distributions in the prospective vs retrospective populations (P = .09). Urine-free cortisol distribution was highly skewed (P < .0001) and showed strong sex interaction. The refineR-generated adult male UFC upper reference limit was 238 nmol/day (86.3 μg/day) and for females was 147 nmol/day (53.3 μg/day); urine volume-corrected, the upper limits were 89 nmol/L (32.3 μg/L) and 91 nmol/L (32.9 μg/L), respectively. Applied to both populations, between 3% and 8% of all results would be flagged high; most are expected to represent nonneoplastic (pseudo)Cushing's.
Conclusions: We used mass population data, where the prevalence of CS was likely very rare, plus a carefully phenotyped sample where CS was considered but excluded, to derive a validated reference interval for 24-h UFC by mass spectrometry in populations that reflect real-world use of the test. Given the highly skewed upper tail of the population distribution, it is probable that high test specificity for CS will require multimodality diagnostic confirmation.
期刊介绍:
European Journal of Endocrinology is the official journal of the European Society of Endocrinology. Its predecessor journal is Acta Endocrinologica.
The journal publishes high-quality original clinical and translational research papers and reviews in paediatric and adult endocrinology, as well as clinical practice guidelines, position statements and debates. Case reports will only be considered if they represent exceptional insights or advances in clinical endocrinology.
Topics covered include, but are not limited to, Adrenal and Steroid, Bone and Mineral Metabolism, Hormones and Cancer, Pituitary and Hypothalamus, Thyroid and Reproduction. In the field of Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism we welcome manuscripts addressing endocrine mechanisms of disease and its complications, management of obesity/diabetes in the context of other endocrine conditions, or aspects of complex disease management. Reports may encompass natural history studies, mechanistic studies, or clinical trials.
Equal consideration is given to all manuscripts in English from any country.