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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 34, 482-488, Copyright © 1988 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry
GG Klee, CM Preissner, IW Schloegel and PC Kao
Division of Laboratory Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905.
This new bioassay for parathyrin (PTH) in plasma (bio-PTH) combines immunoextraction on affinity columns [goat anti-hPTH (1-44) conjugated to Sepharose 4B] and a receptor assay involving an osteosarcoma cell line. The mean extraction efficacy ranges from 87% (as determined with immunopurified 125I-labeled PTH) to 62% for hPTH bioactivity. The assay is standardized with synthetic hPTH (1-84) and can detect as little as 0.9 pmol/L of PTH in 2 mL of plasma. In 100 healthy adults, the 95% reference interval for bio-PTH was less than 0.9 to 6.1 pmol/L (median, 2.0 pmol/L). In 185 patients with surgically confirmed hyperparathyroidism, bio-PTH concentrations ranged from 1.0 to greater than 120 pmol/L (median, 12.9 pmol/L); 80% of values were greater than 6.1 pmol/L. In 50 patients with both preoperative and postoperative determinations, the mean (+/--SD) concentrations of calcium in serum were 113 +/- 10 and 89 +/- 6 mg/L, respectively; the median bio-PTH concentrations were 13.6 and 2.0 pmol/L, respectively. In 22 patients with nonparathyroid-mediated hypercalcemia, the concentration of bio- PTH ranged from less than 0.9 to 5.3 pmol/L (median, 1.8 pmol/L). This bio-PTH assay is slightly less sensitive than our GP235 immunoreactive PTH (iPTH) immunoassay for detecting hyperparathyroidism (Clin Chem 1982;28:69-74); however, the bioassay is more specific and detected some cases missed by the iPTH assay. Overall, 95% of the hyperparathyroid patients had an increased test result for either the bio-PTH or the iPTH assay.
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