Performance and diagnostic application of a two-site immunoradiometric assay for parathyrin in serum
Ratcliffe, W.A.; Heath, D.A.; Ryan, M.; Jones, S.R.
Clinical Chemistry 35(9): 1957-1961
1989
ISSN/ISBN: 0009-9147 PMID: 2776325 Document Number: 331374
The "N-tact" immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) from INCSTAR for parathyrin (PTH) in serum involves a 125I-labeled affinity-purified antiserum to PTH 1-34 and an affinity-purified antiserum to PTH 39-84, the latter bound to a polystyrene bead. The mean detection limit, determined in six consecutive assays, was 4 ng/L. The within-batch CV was less than 7% in the range 15 to 2135 ng/L. The between-batch CV was 11.7% and 5.3% at 30 and 371 ng/L, respectively. Serum PTH in 14 proven cases of primary hyperparathyroidism was 49-808 (median 111) ng/L, undetectable (less than 5 ng/L) in 10 cases of primary hypoparathyroidism and in 10 cases of hypercalcemia associated with malignancy, compared with 7-39 ng/L in 45 normal subjects. PTH was 9 to 19 ng/L in four patients with familial benign hypercalcemia. In 39 patients with renal failure, apparent concentrations were 14 to 857 (median 133) ng/L, but sera from these patients pre-diluted with zero standard did not parallel dilutions of the standard, PTH 1-84. PTH concentrations were not significantly decreased in blood or serum kept at 20 degrees C for up to 6 h. After successful removal of a parathyroid adenoma, the mean half-time for disappearance of PTH in vivo in five hyperparathyroid patients was 3.3 min.