| Literature DB >> 24012740 |
Joshua F Yarrow1, Darren T Beck, Christine F Conover, Luke A Beggs, Bruce A Goldberger, Stephen E Borst.
Abstract
Enzyme immunoassays (EIA) are commonly utilized for the evaluation of androgens in biological fluids; however, careful consideration must be given to cross-reactivity with other endogenous sex-steroid hormones. Our purpose was to determine the validity of a commonly-utilized commercially-available dihydrotestosterone (DHT) EIA. Serum samples obtained from older hypogonadal men who participated in a 12-month randomized controlled trial evaluating the effects of testosterone-enanthate (125 mg/week) or vehicle in combination with finasteride (5mg/day) or placebo were assayed for DHT via EIA and using a validated gold-standard LC-MS/MS approach. Additionally, commercially-available (DHT-free) buffer containing graded testosterone doses was evaluated by DHT immunoassay. DHT concentrations measured via EIA were 79% to >1000% higher than values obtained by LC-MS/MS (p<0.05), with the largest differences (415-1128%) occuring in groups receiving finasteride. Both LC-MS/MS and EIA indicated that testosterone-enanthate increased serum DHT to a similar magnitude. In contrast, finasteride-induced reductions in DHT were detected by LC-MS/MS, but not EIA (p<0.05). No significant associations were present for DHT concentrations between measurement techniques. Cross-reactivity of testosterone with the immunoassay ranged from 18% to 99% and DHT concentrations measured by EIA were highly associated with the spiked testosterone concentrations in DHT-free buffer (r=0.885, p<0.001). In conclusion, we provide evidence invalidating a commonly-utilized commercially-available DHT immunoassay because significant cross-reactivity exists between testosterone and the EIA and because the changes in DHT observed via EIA were not associated with a validated gold-standard measurement technique. The cross-reactivity of testosterone is particularly concerning because testsoterone is present in 100-fold greater concentrations than is DHT within the circulation. Published by Elsevier Inc.Entities:
Keywords: 5α-Reductase; Dihydrotestosterone; Finasteride; Testosterone
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24012740 DOI: 10.1016/j.steroids.2013.08.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Steroids ISSN: 0039-128X Impact factor: 2.668