Is basal ultrasensitive measurement of calcitonin capable of substituting for the pentagastrin-stimulation test?

Clin Endocrinol (Oxf)

Hospices Civils de Lyon et Université Lyon 1, Centre de Médecine Nucléaire, Centre d'Investigation Clinique et Fédération d'Endocrinologie, Groupement Hospitalier Est, Centre de Recherche en Neurosciences, Lyon, France.

Published: March 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluates a new second-generation assay for measuring basal serum calcitonin (CT) in diagnosing and monitoring medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC), suggesting it may be a viable alternative to the pentagastrin-stimulation test.
  • A total of 162 patients, including those with RET proto-oncogene mutations and postoperative follow-up cases, participated, with measurements taken for both basal and Pg-stimulated CT levels.
  • Results showed that while the new assay has high specificity and reduces false negatives compared to older methods, its sensitivity for detecting C-cell disease is still lower than that provided by the Pg-stimulation test.

Article Abstract

Objective: To evaluate a second-generation assay for basal serum calcitonin (CT) measurements compared with the pentagastrin-stimulation test for the diagnosis of inherited medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) and the follow-up of patients with MTC after surgery. Recent American Thyroid Association recommendations suggest the use of basal CT alone to diagnose and assess follow-up of MTC as the pentagastrin (Pg) test is unavailable in many countries.

Design: Multicentric prospective study.

Patients: A total of 162 patients with basal CT <10 ng/l were included: 54 asymptomatic patients harboured noncysteine 'rearranged during transfection' (RET) proto-oncogene mutations and 108 patients had entered follow-up of MTC after surgery.

Measurement: All patients underwent basal and Pg-stimulated CT measurements using a second-generation assay with 5-ng/l functional sensitivity.

Results: Ninety-five per cent of patients with basal CT ≥ 5 ng/l and 25% of patients with basal CT <5 ng/l had a positive Pg-stimulation test (Pg CT >10 ng/l). Compared with the reference Pg test, basal CT ≥ 5 ng/l had 99% specificity, a 95%-positive predictive value but only 35% sensitivity (P < 0.0001). Overall, there were 31% less false-negative results using a 5-ng/l threshold for basal CT instead of the previously used 10-ng/l threshold.

Conclusion: The ultrasensitive CT assay reduces the false-negative rate of basal CT measurements when diagnosing familial MTC and in postoperative follow-up compared with previously used assays. However, its sensitivity to detect C-cell disease remains lower than that of the Pg-stimulation test.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/cen.12001DOI Listing

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