Abstract

This new bioassay for parathyrin (PTH) in plasma (bio-PTH) combines immunoextraction on affinity columns [goat anti-hPTH (1-44) conjugated to Sepharose 4B] and a receptor assay involving an osteosarcoma cell line. The mean extraction efficacy ranges from 87% (as determined with immunopurified 125I-labeled PTH) to 62% for hPTH bioactivity. The assay is standardized with synthetic hPTH (1-84) and can detect as little as 0.9 pmol/L of PTH in 2 mL of plasma. In 100 healthy adults, the 95% reference interval for bio-PTH was less than 0.9 to 6.1 pmol/L (median, 2.0 pmol/L). In 185 patients with surgically confirmed hyperparathyroidism, bio-PTH concentrations ranged from 1.0 to greater than 120 pmol/L (median, 12.9 pmol/L); 80% of values were greater than 6.1 pmol/L. In 50 patients with both preoperative and postoperative determinations, the mean (+/--SD) concentrations of calcium in serum were 113 +/- 10 and 89 +/- 6 mg/L, respectively; the median bio-PTH concentrations were 13.6 and 2.0 pmol/L, respectively. In 22 patients with nonparathyroid-mediated hypercalcemia, the concentration of bio-PTH ranged from less than 0.9 to 5.3 pmol/L (median, 1.8 pmol/L). This bio-PTH assay is slightly less sensitive than our GP235 immunoreactive PTH (iPTH) immunoassay for detecting hyperparathyroidism (Clin Chem 1982;28:69-74); however, the bioassay is more specific and detected some cases missed by the iPTH assay. Overall, 95% of the hyperparathyroid patients had an increased test result for either the bio-PTH or the iPTH assay.

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