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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Comparing in-clinic and lab tests for cat hyperthyroidism monitoring

By Peterson, Mark E et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2018·1 Animal Endocrine Clinic, United States·View original on PubMed

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Original publication title: Comparison of in-clinic point-of-care and reference laboratory total thyroxine immunoassays for diagnosis and post-treatment monitoring of hyperthyroid cats.

Species:
cat

Plain-English summary

A group of 157 cats, including 127 with hyperthyroidism and 30 that had been treated with radioiodine, were tested for thyroid hormone levels using two different methods. One method was a quick in-clinic test, while the other was a more detailed lab test. The results showed that the in-clinic test was accurate and reliable, matching the lab results closely about 97% of the time. For cats with thyroid hormone levels near the normal range, vets may recommend retesting in a few weeks or doing additional tests to confirm thyroid health.

People also search for: cat hyperthyroidism treatment · cat thyroid test results · how to monitor cat thyroid levels

Abstract

Objectives The Catalyst One Chemistry Analyzer (IDEXX Laboratories) is a point-of-care instrument that can measure total thyroxine (TT4) by immunoassay. The aims of this study were to evaluate the analytic performance of the Catalyst TT4 assay in feline sera and to examine agreement of the Catalyst TT4 results with those measured by immunoassay at a veterinary reference laboratory. Methods Assay precision, reproducibility and linearity were evaluated for the Catalyst TT4 assay. For method comparison, TT4 concentrations in serum samples from 157 cats (127 hyperthyroid, 30 radioiodine-treated cats) were analyzed by both in-clinic and reference laboratory methods. Results The Catalyst TT4 demonstrated good precision and reproducibility (coefficients of variation ⩽8.5%) and excellent linearity in the diagnostic range of 6-150 nmol/l. Differences between the two TT4 methods showed no proportional or fixed bias (Bland-Altman plots) but did demonstrate greater spread of values at higher TT4 concentrations. Statistical analysis of percent differences between methods indicated 95% limits of agreement of ± 30%. When serum TT4 concentrations were classified as low, high or within the reference interval (12-50 nmol/l) for each assay, there was strong agreement (96.8%) in classification between methods. Conclusions and relevance The Catalyst TT4 assay provided precise serum TT4 concentrations in the 157 samples analyzed, which agreed well with results provided by a reference laboratory. Cats with Catalyst TT4 concentrations near decision thresholds (eg, normal vs high) should either have TT4 concentration repeated a few weeks later and/or undergo further testing (eg, free T4, serum thyroid-stimulating hormone, thyroid scintigraphy) to determine thyroid status.

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Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28494633/