| Literature DB >> 30181896 |
Júnia Ribeiro de Oliveira Longo Schweizer1, Antônio Ribeiro-Oliveira1, Martin Bidlingmaier2.
Abstract
The measurement of circulating concentrations of growth hormone (GH) is an indispensable tool in the diagnosis of both GH deficiency and GH excess. GH is a heterogeneous protein composed of several molecular isoforms, but the physiological role of these different isoforms has not yet been fully understood. The 22KD GH (22 K-GH) is the main isoform in circulation, followed by 20KD GH (20 K-GH) and other rare isoforms. Studies have been performed to better understand the biological actions of the different isoforms as well as their importance in pathological conditions. Generally, the non-22 K- and 20 K-GH isoforms are secreted in parallel to 22 K-GH, and only very moderate changes in the ratio between isoforms have been described in some pituitary tumors or during exercise. Therefore, in a diagnostic approach, concentrations of 22 K-GH accurately reflect total GH secretion. On the other hand, the differential recognition of GH isoforms by different GH immunoassays used in clinical routine contributes to the known discrepancy in results from different GH assays. This makes the application of uniform decision limits problematic. Therefore, the worldwide efforts to standardize GH assays include the recommendation to use 22 K-GH specific GH assays calibrated against the pure 22 K-GH reference preparation 98/574. Adoption of this recommendation might lead to improvement in diagnosis and follow-up of pathological conditions, and facilitate the comparison of results from different laboratories.Entities:
Keywords: 20 k growth hormone isoform; 22 k growth hormone isoform; Acromegaly; Growth hormone; Growth hormone assays; Growth hormone deficiency; Growth hormone isoform; Growth hormone molecule; IRP 98/574
Year: 2018 PMID: 30181896 PMCID: PMC6114276 DOI: 10.1186/s40842-018-0068-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Diabetes Endocrinol ISSN: 2055-8260
Fig. 1The 22 K-GH isoform structure and GH-R (GH receptor) biding sites (reproduced with permission from [19]
Fig. 2The 22 K-GH isoform molecule with 191 residues. The 20 K-GH isoform has the same residues, except the 32–46 residues, which are missing
Characteristics of commonly used commercial assays for GH (according to manufacturers instructions/kit inserts available to the authors or according to published data). Calibration has changed for several assays in recent years, and the process is ongoing. To the best of the authors knowledge the assays listed here have uniformly adopted the latest recombinant standard for all countries. The list of assays is not complete. Additional hGH assays exist, including an unknown number of in-house assays. (modified from [3]
| Manufacturer | Name | Assay principle | Calibration | Isoform-specificity | Measuring range | Recommended sample material | Comment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Siemens | Immulite 2000 | Two-site Chemilumminescent immunometric assay | 98/574 | Not provided | 0.05 to 40 ng/mL Analytical sensitivity: 0.01 ng/mL | Serum | ng/mL × 3.0 ➔mIU/L |
| Diasorin | Liaison hGH | Chemiluminescent sandwich immunoassay | 98/574 | Not provided | 0.009–80 ng/mL | Serum | |
| Beckmann-Coulter | Access Ultrasensitive hGH | Automated immunometric assay, Chemiluminescence | 98/574 | See comment | 0.002–35 ng/mL (μ/L) | Serum or plasma (heparin) | Cross reaction analysed with GH 8 ng/mL for 20 K-GH: − 2542% |
| IDS | iSYS hGH | Chemilumminescent assay | 98/574 | 22kD GH: 100% | 0.05–100 ng/mL | Serum or plasma (heparin or EDTA) | Do not cross react with substances in these concentrations: 20 K-GH (10 ng/mL); placental GH (200 ng/mL); HPL (10,000 ng/mL); prolactin (40.000 ng/mL); pegvisomant (50,000 ng/mL); biotin 300 nmol/L); GHBP: 140 ng/mL. ng/mL × 3.0=μIU/mL |
| DIASource | hGH IRMA | Immunometric assay enzyme amplified sensitivity | 98/574 | Not provided | 1–120 ng/mL | Serum, plasma | Conversion factor: 1μIU = 0.33 ng |
| hGH EASIA | Enzyme-Immunoassay | 98/574 | Not provided | 0.45–98 ng/mL | Serum, plasma | Conversion factor: 1μIU = 0.33 ng | |
| CisBio | hGH-RIACT | Immunoradiometric | 98/574 | Not provided | 0.03–75 ng/mL | Serum | 1 ng = 3μIU; do not cross react with prolactin and hPL. Cross reaction with 20kD GH is less than 5% for the concentration up to 3750 ng/mL (22kD GH proportional concentration above 24,000 ng/mL) |
Cut-off limits derived from the same cohort of short children with different GH assays (adapted from reference [76])
| Assay | Cut off limit (ng/mL) |
|---|---|
| Immulite 2000 (Siemens) | 7.77 |
| AutoDELFIA (Perkin-Elmer) | 7.44 |
| iSYS (IDS) | 7.09 |
| Liaison (DIASorin) | 6.25 |
| RIA (in-house Tübingen) | 5.28 |
| Dxl (Beckmann-Coulter) | 5.15 |
| ELISA (Mediagnost) | 5.14 |
| BC-IRMA (Beckmann-Coulter) | 4.32 |