| Literature DB >> 31641565 |
Ilana Rosner1, Everett Rogers1, Amanda Maddrey2, David M Goldberg3.
Abstract
A 67-year-old female with a past medical history of multiple endocrine issues presented for follow-up subsequent to abnormal routine blood testing results. These included low thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), low parathyroid hormone (PTH), and mildly elevated calcium levels. The presence of hypercalcemia and accompanying low PTH raised the concern for malignancy, while the depressed TSH indicated hyperthyroidism. Review of the patient's medications revealed daily supplementation with 5 mg of vitamin B7 (biotin). The biotin was discontinued after suspecting the supplement was interfering with the patient's lab values. The labs were repeated one month later. The results showed normalized TSH, PTH, and calcium levels. The increasingly wide-spread use of biotin supplementation and the use of biotin as a component in many of the most common clinical assays has led to a trend of lab errors due to biotin interference. While some physicians are aware of the possibility of skewed results, steps need to be taken to prevent misdiagnosis. This includes ensuring that information about this issue is more widely disseminated, accurately accounting for a patient's supplement use, reconciling proper clinical correlation with lab results, and promptly reporting when biotin is determined to be the cause of otherwise unexplained lab errors.Entities:
Keywords: biotin; biotin-streptavidin immunoassay; endocrinology; lab errors; vitamin b7
Year: 2019 PMID: 31641565 PMCID: PMC6802814 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.5470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Original lab values on 5 mg of biotin supplementation, and follow-up labs one month after discontinuation of biotin.
PTH: Parathyroid hormone; TSH: Thyroid stimulating hormone.
| Labs (Reference Range) | At Presentation | One Month Follow-up |
| PTH (15-65 pg/mL) | 4.3 pg/ml | 21 pg/ml |
| TSH (.465-4.683 mIU/L) | 0.24 mIU/ml | 3.30 mIU/ml |
| Calcium (6.8-10.5 mg/dL) | 10.6 mg/dL | 10 mg/dL |
| Calcium 24-hour urine (42-353 mg/24 hours) | N/A | 250 mg/24 hours |
| Ionized Calcium (4.57-5.43 mg/dL) | N/A | 5.25 mg/dL |
Figure 1Sandwich assay with and without biotin. High concentrations of plasma biotin can lead to falsely decreased lab results in this type of assay.
Figure 2Competitive assay with and without biotin. High concentrations of plasma biotin can lead to falsely elevated lab results in this type of assay.