Abstract

Diabetes insipidus (DI), be it from central or nephrogenic origin, must be differentiated from secondary forms of hypotonic polyuria such as primary polydipsia. Differentiation is crucial since wrong treatment can have deleterious consequences. Since decades, the gold standard for differentiation has been the water deprivation test, which has limitations leading to an overall unsatisfying diagnostic accuracy. Furthermore, it is cumbersome for patients with a long test duration. Clinical signs and symptoms and MRI characteristics overlap between patients with DI and primary polydipsia. The direct test including vasopressin (AVP) measurement upon osmotic stimulation was meant to overcome these limitations, but failed to enter clinical practice mainly due to technical constraints of the AVP assay. Copeptin is secreted in equimolar amount to AVP but can easily be measured with a sandwich immunoassay. A high correlation between copeptin and AVP has been shown. Accordingly, copeptin mirrors the amount of AVP in the circulation and has led to a ‘revival’ of the direct test in the differential diagnosis of DI. We have shown that a baseline copeptin, without prior thirsting, unequivocally identifies patients with nephrogenic DI. In contrast, for the differentiation between central DI and primary polydipsia, a stimulated copeptin level of 4.9 pmol/L upon hypertonic saline infusion differentiates these two entities with a high diagnostic accuracy and is superior to the water deprivation test. Close sodium monitoring during the test is a prerequisite. Further new test methods are currently evaluated and might provide an even simpler way of differential diagnosis in the future.

Highlights

  • Diabetes insipidus (DI) (DI) belongs to the polyuria polydipsia syndrome and is characterized by a high urinary output of more than 50 mL per kg body weight per 24 h, accompanied by polydipsia of more than 3 L a day [1]

  • This review focuses on new diagnostic approaches in the differential diagnosis of polyuria polydipsia syndrome

  • R14 showed that direct measurement of plasma arginine vasopressin (AVP) had a superior diagnostic accuracy compared to the classical water deprivation test

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Summary

European Journal of Endocrinology

Invited Author’s profile Mirjam Christ-Crain is full Professor of Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism at the University of Basel and the University Hospital of Basel, Switzerland. From 2013 she has been the Deputy Chief at the Clinic for Endocrinology, University Hospital Basel and from 2014 she has been the Head of the Department of Clinical Research at the University of Basel. Her main research interest is on vasopressin-dependent disorders of fluid homeostasis, i.e. DI and hyponatremia. She has authored and co-authored more than 200 publications and received several awards for her research

Introduction
Clinical manifestations
Radiological findings
Tests for differential diagnosis
Copeptin in the differential diagnosis of polyuria polydipsia syndrome
Nephrogenic DI
Copeptin in the diagnosis of postsurgical DI
Findings
Conclusions and future prospects
Full Text
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