| Literature DB >> 33980941 |
Clara Odilia Sailer1,2, Julie Refardt1,2, Claudine Angela Blum1,2,3, Ingeborg Schnyder1,2, Jose Alberto Molina-Tijeras1, Wiebke Fenske4,5, Mirjam Christ-Crain6,7.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to correlate three commercially available copeptin assays and their diagnostic accuracy in the differential diagnosis of the polyuria-polydipsia syndrome. Analyzed data include repeated copeptin measures of 8 healthy volunteers and 40 patients with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome undergoing osmotic stimulation and of 40 patients hospitalized with pneumonia. Copeptin was measured using the automated Brahms KRYPTOR, the manual Brahms LIA and the manual Cloud Clone ELISA assay. Primary outcome was the interrater correlation coefficient (ICC) and diagnostic accuracy in the polyuria-polydipsia syndrome of the three assays. In healthy volunteers, there was a moderate correlation for the KRYPTOR and LIA (ICC 0.74; 95% CI 0.07 to 0.91), and a poor correlation for the KRYPTOR and ELISA (ICC 0.07; 95% CI - 0.06 to 0.29), as for the LIA and ELISA (ICC 0.04; 95% CI - 0.04 to 0.17). The KRYPTOR had the highest diagnostic accuracy (98% (95% CI 83 to100)), comparable to the LIA (88% (95% CI 74 to 100)), while the ELISA had a poor diagnostic accuracy (55% (95% CI 34 to 68)) in the differential diagnosis of the polyuria-polydipsia syndrome. The KRYPTOR and LIA yield comparable copeptin concentrations and high diagnostic accuracy, while the ELISA correlates poorly with the other two assays and shows a poor diagnostic accuracy for polyuria-polydipsia patients. The current copeptin cut-off is valid for the KRYPTOR and LIA assay. Our results indicate that interpretation with other assays should be performed with caution and separate validation studies are required before their use in differentiating patients with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome.Trial registration: NCT02647736 January 6, 2016/NCT01940614 September 12, 2013/NCT00973154 September 9, 2009.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33980941 PMCID: PMC8114908 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-89505-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Baseline Characteristics of all three cohorts.
| Healthy volunteers | Polyuria-polydipsia patients | Severely ill patients | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of patients | 8 | 40 | 40 |
| Age (years) | 25.5 [23.8, 35.2] | 40.0 [28.8, 49.2] | 85.0 [79.5, 89.2] |
| Male sex, n (%) | 4 (50) | 20 (50) | 29 (72) |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 25.5 (8.4) | 26.5 (7.1) | 25.6 (4.9) |
| Systolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 119 (12) | 123 (16) | 120 (25) |
| Diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) | 75 (8) | 76 (9) | 64 (14) |
| Heart rate (bpm) | 68 (7) | 73 (13) | 89 (23) |
Continuous variables are expressed as median [Interquartile range], categorical variables as number and percentage.
BMI body mass index, n number, bpm beats per minute, mmHg millimeter mercury.
Median copeptin concentrations of all three patients’ cohorts at any measured timepoint using the three different copeptin assays.
| KRYPTOR | LIA | ELISA | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 14.7 [8.8, 20.6] | 10.1 [7.1, 14.0] | 48.1 [35.4, 59.0] | < 0.001* |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 14.7 [8.8, 20.6] | 10.1 [7.1, 14.0] | – | < 0.001* |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 14.7 [8.8, 20.6] | – | 48.1 [35.4, 59.0] | < 0.001* |
| LIA vs ELISA | – | 10.1 [7.1, 14.0] | 48.1 [35.4, 59.0] | < 0.001* |
| Plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 74.3 [50.5, 135.1] | 70.9 [47.8, 108.6] | 80.1 [70.2, 125.0] | 0.025* |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 74.3 [50.5, 135.1] | 70.9 [47.8, 108.6] | – | 0.023* |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 74.3 [50.5, 135.1] | – | 80.1 [70.2, 125.0] | 1 |
| LIA vs ELISA | – | 70.9 [47.8, 108.6] | 80.1 [70.2, 125.0] | 0.71 |
| Plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 2.9 [1.6, 10.3] | 2.8 [0.7, 9.7] | 17.9 [11.3, 28.9] | < 0.001* |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 2.9 [1.6, 10.3] | 2.8 [0.7, 9.7] | 0.70 | |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 2.9 [1.6, 10.3] | 17.9 [11.3, 28.9] | < 0.001* | |
| LIA vs ELISA | 2.8 [0.7, 9.7] | 17.9 [11.3, 28.9] | < 0.001* | |
Copeptin was measured in duplicates with the KRYPTOR, the LIA and the ELISA. Continuous variables are expressed as median [interquartile range]. Three-group comparison was done using the Friedman Test. Posthoc two group comparison was done using the paired Wilcoxon Sign Rank Test with Bonferroni p-value adjustment.
*Statistically significant.
Figure 1Intra-assay difference in copeptin concentrations in healthy volunteers. Bland–Altman graph of intra-assay difference in copeptin concentrations in healthy volunteers for (a) the KRYPTOR, (b) the LIA and (c) the ELISA. The dotted middle line represents the mean difference in copeptin concentrations between the two different assays (a): − 0.08 pmol/l (95% limits − 0.75 to 0.48), (b): − 0.55 pmol/l (95% limits − 6.69 to 5.59), (c): 0.92 pmol/l (95% limits − 17.32 to 19.16)). The outer dotted lines represent the 95% confident interval limits of agreement. (a) KRYPTOR 1 vs KRYPTOR 2, (b) LIA 1 vs LIA 2, (c) ELISA 1 vs ELISA 2.
Figure 2Inter-assay difference in copeptin concentrations in healthy volunteers. Bland–Altman graph of inter-assay difference in copeptin concentrations in healthy volunteers for (a) the KRYPTOR vs LIA, (b) the KRYPTOR vs ELISA and (c) the LIA vs ELISA. The dotted middle line represents the mean difference in copeptin concentrations between the two different assays ((a): 5.51 pmol/l (95% limits − 4.16 to 15.18), (b): − 30.8 pmol/l (95% limits − 60.63 to − 1.03), (c): − 36.34 pmol/l (95% limits − 63.37 to − 9.32)). The outer dotted lines represent the 95% confident interval limits of agreement. (a) KRYPTOR vs LIA, (b) KRYPTOR vs ELISA, (c) LIA vs ELISA.
Basal and stimulated copeptin concentrations of patients with central diabetes insipidus and primary polydipsia upon the hypertonic saline infusion test.
| KRYPTOR | LIA | ELISA | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basal plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 1.6 [1.4, 1.9] | 0.8 [0.4, 2.0] | 18.2 [8.8, 23.1] | < 0.001* |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 1.6 [1.4, 1.9] | 0.8 [0.4, 2.0] | – | 0.52 |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 1.6 [1.4, 1.9] | – | 18.2 [8.8, 23.1] | < 0.001* |
| LIA vs ELISA | – | 0.8 [0.4, 2.0] | 18.2 [8.8, 23.1] | < 0.001* |
| Stimulated plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 1.7 [1.3, 2.6] | 1.4 [0.4, 2.3] | 17.2 [12.8, 28.6] | < 0.001* |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 1.7 [1.3, 2.6] | 1.4 [0.4, 2.3] | – | 1 |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 1.7 [1.3, 2.6] | – | 17.2 [12.8, 28.6] | < 0.001* |
| LIA vs ELISA | – | 1.4 [0.4, 2.3] | 17.2 [12.8, 28.6] | < 0.001* |
| Basal plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 4.1 [2.6, 5.6] | 3.4 [1.7, 5.9] | 14.7 [11.1, 27.8] | < 0.001* |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 4.1 [2.6, 5.6] | 3.4 [1.7, 5.9] | 1 | |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 4.1 [2.6, 5.6] | 14.7 [11.1, 27.8] | < 0.001* | |
| LIA vs ELISA | 3.4 [1.7, 5.9] | 14.7 [11.1, 27.8] | 0.001* | |
| Stimulated plasma copeptin (pmol/l) | 20.4 [13.0, 27.8] | 18.0 [11.5, 26.4] | 23.0 [15.7, 34.6] | 0.350 |
| KRYPTOR vs LIA | 20.4 [13.0, 27.8] | 18.0 [11.5, 26.4] | – | 1 |
| KRYPTOR vs ELISA | 20.4 [13.0, 27.8] | – | 23.0 [15.7, 34.6] | 0.34 |
| LIA vs ELISA | – | 18.0 [11.5, 26.4] | 23.0 [15.7, 34.6] | 0.34 |
Copeptin was measured in duplicates with the KRYPTOR, the LIA and the ELISA. Results are indicated as median [Interquartile range]. Three-group comparison was done using the Friedman Test. Posthoc two group comparison was done using the paired Wilcoxon Sign Rank Test with Bonferroni p-value adjustment.
*Statistically significant.
Diagnostic performance of osmotically stimulated copeptin concentrations.
| Diagnostic accuracy | Sensitivity | Specificity | Positive predictive value | Negative predictive value | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % [95% CI] | No./total no | % [95% CI] | No./total no | % [95% CI] | No./total no | % [95% CI] | No./total no | % [95% CI] | No./total no | |
| KRYPTOR | 98 [83, 100] | 39/40 | 95 [75, 100] | 19/20 | 100 [83, 100] | 20/20 | 100 [82, 100] | 19/19 | 95 [76, 100] | 20/21 |
| LIA | 88 [74, 100] | 35/40 | 80 [56, 94] | 16/20 | 95 [75, 100] | 19/20 | 94 [71, 100] | 16/17 | 83 [61, 95] | 19/23 |
| ELISA | 55 [34, 68] | 22/40 | 10 [1, 32] | 2/20 | 100 [83, 100] | 20/20 | 100 [16, 100] | 2/2 | 53 [36, 69] | 20/38 |
A copeptin cut-off of 4.9 pmol/l was used for the differential diagnosis of central diabetes insipidus (≤ 4.9 pmol/l) and primary polydipsia (> 4.9 pmol/l). Copeptin was measured in duplicates using the KRYPTOR, the LIA and the ELISA. Diagnostic accuracy indicates correctly identifying patients as having central diabetes insipidus or primary polydipsia. Sensitivity indicates correctly identifying patients as having central diabetes insipidus. Specificity indicates correctly identifying patients as having primary polydipsia.