| Literature DB >> 31637056 |
Kittrawee Kritmetapak1, Chatlert Pongchaiyakul2.
Abstract
Accurate measurement of parathyroid hormone (PTH) is crucial for therapeutic decision-making in patients with chronic kidney disease-mineral and bone disorder (CKD-MBD). The second-generation PTH assays, often referred to as "intact PTH" assays, are the current standard and most available assays in clinical practice. However, intact PTH assays measure both full-length biologically active PTH and heterogeneous PTH fragments in the circulation, providing the equivocal value of PTH measurement in patients with CKD-MBD. Due to the variability of PTH assays, preanalytical sample errors, and the phenomenon of end-organ PTH hyporesponsiveness, current CKD-MBD guidelines recommend a wide range for serum PTH targets (2-9 the upper normal limit of the intact PTH assay) in dialysis patients to diminish the risk of developing adynamic bone disease. Nevertheless, a sizeable proportion of CKD patients still experience renal osteodystrophy despite having serum PTH levels within the recommended range. The primary cause of this inconsistency is the analytical interference of various PTH fragments and oxidized PTH forms that considerably accumulate in CKD patients. Therefore, a new mass spectrometry-based assay, which is capable of specifically measuring the whole spectra of PTH fragments, can potentially improve diagnostic accuracy for renal osteodystrophy. However, the effects of different PTH fragments on bone metabolism, vascular calcification, and mortality in CKD patients warrant further research.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31637056 PMCID: PMC6766083 DOI: 10.1155/2019/5496710
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
Figure 1Mechanism of phosphate-induced secondary hyperparathyroidism. PTH, parathyroid hormone; VDR, vitamin D receptor.
Comparison among the three generations of PTH assay.
| First-generation PTH assay | Second-generation PTH assay | Third-generation PTH assay | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Name | C-terminal radioimmunoassay | Intact PTH assay | “Bioactive” or “biointact” or “whole” PTH assay |
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| Technique | Single-antibody radioimmunoassay | Two-site sandwich immunoassay | Two-site sandwich immunoassay |
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| Antibody | Detection antibody (diverse epitopes at the mid- or C-terminal part of the PTH) | Capture C-terminal antibody (amino acid positions 39-84) and detection N-terminal antibody (amino acid positions 12-18, 13-24, or 26-32) | Capture C-terminal antibody (amino acid positions 39-84) and detection N-terminal antibody (amino acid positions 1-4) |
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| Percent of circulating PTH (1-84) in normal GFR (%) | 20 | 80 | 95 |
| Percent of circulating PTH (1-84) in CKD | 5 | 50 | 85 |
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| Short C-terminal PTH fragment | Detectable | Not detected | Not detected |
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| Long C-terminal PTH fragment or non-(1-84) PTH fragment | Detectable | Detectable | Not detected |
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| N-terminal PTH form | Detectable | Not detected if the epitope is proximal (amino acid positions 12-18 or 13-24), detectable if the epitope is distal (amino acid positions 26-32) | Detectable |
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| Current test availability | No | Yes (mostly in clinical practice) | Yes (mostly in research) |
CKD, chronic kidney disease; GFR, glomerular filtration rate; PTH, parathyroid hormone.