Role of Cannulated Prolactin Test in Evaluation of Hyperprolactinemia - A Retrospective Study.

Endocr Pract

Hebrew University, The Faculty of Medicine, Jerusalem, Israel; the Department of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Hadassah Medical Center, Jerusalem, Israel.

Published: November 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • Guidelines suggest that a single elevated prolactin measurement is usually enough for diagnosing hyperprolactinemia, but this can sometimes lead to misdiagnosis due to stress-induced conditions.
  • This study reviewed 757 patients who underwent a cannulated prolactin test to assess the effectiveness of confirming hyperprolactinemia, measuring prolactin at baseline and later without repeated blood draws.
  • Results indicated that many patients had normal prolactin levels in subsequent tests, and those with significantly high referral levels (>5.0-fold above normal) are unlikely to normalize, suggesting a need for pituitary imaging rather than unnecessary testing.
  • The study concludes that employing the cannulated test can help reduce unnecessary evaluations and costs for patients with lower prol

Article Abstract

Objective: While guidelines propose a single elevated prolactin measurement drawn without excess venipuncture stress as sufficient for diagnosing hyperprolactinemia, this may lead to unnecessary evaluation in the setting of stress-induced hyperprolactinemia. In this study, we aimed to define the role of the cannulated prolactin test in confirming hyperprolactinemia.

Methods: We conducted a retrospective review of 757 patients with unexplained hyperprolactinemia who performed a cannulated prolactin test in a community-based referral endocrine clinic between 2000-2015. The prolactin test consisted of "test-baseline" levels taken at rest (T0), and cannulated measurements at 60 and 90 minutes (T60 and T90) without repeated venipuncture. The most recent prolactin level performed prior to the test (referral-prolactin) was collected.

Results: Referral-prolactin was available for 621 (82%) patients, of whom 324 (52.2%) normalized at T0. The probability of normoprolactinemia at T0 was 50% if referral-prolactin was 2.0-fold the upper-limit-of-normal (ULN), yet only 5% if referral-prolactin was 5.0-fold the ULN. Of the 359 patients with hyperprolactinemia at T0, prolactin normalized at T60 and/or T90 in 99 (27.6%) patients. The probability of normoprolactinemia was low (<5%) in those with T0 prolactin levels >2.4-fold ULN. Overall, of 757 prolactin tests performed, only 260 (34.3%) patients had persistent hyperprolactinemia.

Conclusion: Patients with referral-prolactin levels >5.0-fold the ULN, or a rested-prolactin (T0) >2.4-fold the ULN are unlikely to normalize during the cannulated test and consideration should be made to proceed directly with pituitary imaging. In patients with prolactin levels below these thresholds, the cannulated prolactin test may considerably reduce unnecessary investigations, treatment, and cost.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.4158/EP-2020-0260DOI Listing

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