Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Measuring hormone levels in cats with adrenal diseases and other
By Tardo, Antonio M et al.·Published in Journal of feline medicine and surgery·2021·Department of Veterinary Medical Sciences, Italy·View original on PubMed →
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Original publication title: Feline plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone: validation of a chemiluminescent assay and concentrations in cats with hypercortisolism, primary hypoadrenocorticism and other diseases.
- Species:
- cat
Plain-English summary
A group of cats with different health issues, including hypercortisolism (high cortisol levels) and hypoadrenocorticism (low cortisol levels), were tested to see how well a new blood test could measure a hormone called adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH). The study found that healthy cats had a normal range of ACTH levels, while those with hypercortisolism and hypoadrenocorticism had significantly higher levels. This blood test could help veterinarians diagnose these conditions more accurately. The researchers concluded that measuring ACTH is a useful tool for identifying specific adrenal problems in cats.
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Abstract
OBJECTIVES: The aims of this study were to validate a commercially available chemiluminescent assay for measurement of feline plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone concentration (ACTH), to determine the normal reference interval (RI) of plasma ACTH in healthy cats, to assess plasma ACTH in cats with naturally occurring hypercortisolism (HC), primary hypoadrenocorticism (PH) and other diseases (OD), and to evaluate the effect of aprotinin on plasma ACTH degradation. METHODS: Forty healthy cats, 10 with HC, 11 with PH and 30 with OD, were included. The chemiluminescent enzyme immunometric assay was evaluated by measurement of intra-assay precision, interassay precision and linearity. The RI for plasma ACTH in healthy cats was established using robust methods. Plasma ACTH of samples collected with and without aprotinin, stored at 4°C and assayed over a 6-day period, was measured. RESULTS: The intra-assay coefficients of variance (CVs) ranged from 2.7% to 4.3% and interassay CVs from 3.3% to 10.7%. Dilution studies showed excellent accuracy (R>0.99). The RI for plasma ACTH in healthy cats was 32-370 pg/ml. Plasma ACTH was not significantly different between healthy cats and the OD group. Cats with pituitary-dependent hypercortisolism (PDH) and PH had significantly higher plasma ACTH than the other groups. Plasma ACTH did not show significant differences when samples collected with and without aprotinin were compared. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: The Immulite chemiluminescent assay is a valid technique for measuring plasma ACTH in cats and the RI of plasma ACTH is quite wide. Owing to the low overlap between healthy or OD cats and cats with HC or PH, the measurement of plasma ACTH appears to be useful and should be included in the diagnostic work-up when HC or PH are suspected. Furthermore, the measurement of plasma ACTH may be an accurate test for differentiating PDH from adrenal-dependent hypercortisolism.
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Search related cases →Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32478637/