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Department of Endocrinology, University of Milan, Istituto Scientifico Ospedale San Luca (P.P., P.T., A.D., F.P.G., F.C.), 20149 Milan, Italy; and Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Policlinico A. Gemelli (S.M.C.), 00168 Rome, Italy
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Prof. Francesco Cavagnini, Chair of Endocrinology, University of Milan, Istituto Scientifico Ospedale San Luca, Istituto Auxologico Italiano, Via Spagnoletto 3, 20149 Milan, Italy. E-mail: cavagnini{at}auxologico.it.
| Abstract |
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569 nmol/24 h) between CS and PC. In conclusion, MSC measurement can be recommended as a first-line test for CS in both low risk (simple obesity) and high-risk (i.e. PC) patients. Given its convenience, this procedure can be added to tests traditionally used for this purpose, such as UFC and MNC. | Introduction |
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To establish the diagnostic performance of MSC compared with other screening tests, we prospectively measured UFC, MNC, and MSC in normal weight, healthy volunteers (NS), in subjects with simple obesity (OB) and in patients evaluated for CS.
| Subjects and Methods |
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Three hundred subjects comprising 41 patients with CS, 33 with PC, 199 with OB, and 27 NS admitted at our institution between February 1994 and October 2000, participated in the study. The diagnosis of CS was based on clinical and laboratory findings (2, 11) and comprised 33 patients with Cushings disease, six with cortisol-secreting adrenal tumor, one with ACTH-independent adrenocortical nodular hyperplasia, and one with ACTH-secreting pancreatic neuroendocrine tumor. The diagnosis of Cushings disease was confirmed by pituitary pathology in 29 cases and by postoperative clinical and biochemical resolution of hypercortisolism in the remaining four.
Diagnosis of PC was established by the presence of Cushingoid signs, e.g. visceral obesity, buffalo hump, hirsutism, and purple striae, associated with hypercortisolism (UFC range, 80.1205.3 µg/24 h; 221566.4 nmol/24 h) and in some cases lack of cortisol circadian rhythm and/or its suppression by low dose overnight dex. Of these patients, two had alcoholic PC, three had poorly controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus, 11 had major depression according to DSM IV criteria (17), seven had marked truncal obesity, and 10 had polycystic ovary syndrome according to standard clinical, hormonal, and ecographic criteria (18). Patients with PC displayed no clinical or biochemical progression toward overt CS on prolonged follow-up (mean, 27 months; range, 2446 months). When appropriate, the diagnosis of CS was also excluded by means of a dex-CRH test (10) and in patients with ACTH-dependent hypercortisolism by an absent ACTH response to desmopressin (11). Normal weight volunteers were hospital nurses and attendants admitted to the hospital for 2 d for MNC determination. None of the NS and OB had a history or present evidence of major psychiatric disease or was taking medications known to interfere with the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. All subjects gave informed consent to participate in the study, which was approved by the ethical committee of our institution.
Study design
Blood samples were collected at 0800 and 2400 h, 1 h after placement of an in-dwelling venous catheter. When asleep, subjects were awakened to collect saliva immediately before blood sampling. Between 2100 and 2400 h, patients and volunteers were fasting and resting in bed and were not engaged in any activity. Tests were performed in all study subjects at least 24 h after admission. Three consecutive 24-h urine collections for UFC measurement were performed for each subject. UFC values were calculated as the mean of the data from these specimens.
Assays
Saliva was collected in commercially available devices (Salivette) using a cotton swab chewed for 23 min and inserted into a double-chamber plastic test tube. Serum and salivary samples were centrifuged at 4 C and stored at -20 C until assayed. Serum and urinary cortisol were measured by RIA [Byk-Sangtec Diagnostica (Dietzenbach, Germany) for serum cortisol and Diagnostic Products (Los Angeles, CA) for urinary cortisol]. Salivary cortisol was measured with the same assay used for serum with the analyte volume increased from 25250 µl. UFC was assayed after urine extraction with dichloromethane. The sensitivity of the methods was 50 ng/dl (1.4 nmol/liter) for salivary cortisol and 0.5 µg/dl (13.8 nmol/liter) for serum and urinary cortisol. Intra- and interassay coefficients of variations were 4.4 and 4.9% for serum cortisol, 4.5 and 5.8% for salivary cortisol, and 3.5 and 6.2% for UFC, respectively. All samples from a given subject were run in the same assay. Normal ranges in our laboratory are 525 µg/dl (138689.8 nmol/liter) and 1080 µg/24 h (27.6220.7 nmol/24 h) for 0800 h serum cortisol and UFC, respectively. No reference range is given for MNC values.
Statistical analyses
Results are presented as the mean ± SE. Intergroup differences were evaluated by ANOVA (Fishers post hoc test), whereas correlations between serum and salivary cortisol were performed by linear regression analysis. Sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, and predictive values were calculated according to standard statistical methods (19). Sensitivity against 1-specificity was plotted at each level, and the area under the receiver operator characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC) of each test, an index of the probability of correctly identifying CS and the other groups of subjects, was compared by nonparametric Wilcoxon statistic (20). Ninety-five percent confidence intervals for AUC and other diagnostic parameters were calculated according to the formulae: ±1.96 x SE and x ± 1.96
x (1 - x)/n, respectively. The concordance of the diagnoses assigned by salivary and serum cortisol measurements was assessed by
2 statistic using cut-off criteria obtained from ROC analysis. Statistical analyses were performed with the commercially available software package (SPSS for Windows, version 10.0, SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL). P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.
| Results |
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ROC curves were created to establish both the optimal threshold values for each test and their inherent diagnostic efficacy independently from specific cut-offs. In the whole study population no statistically significant differences in terms of sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, or predictive values were observed among UFC, MNC, and MSC if cut-off values derived from ROC analysis were applied, i.e. 120 µg/24 h (331.1 nmol/24 h) for UFC, 12 µg/dl (331.1 nmol/liter) for MNC, and 0.35 µg/dl (9.7 nmol/liter) for MSC. However, the specificities of MNC and UFC appeared to be slightly, although not significantly, higher than that of MSC (Table 2
). Accordingly, the AUCs relative to MNC and UFC were slightly greater than that of MSC (Fig. 2
and Table 2
). In contrast, the specificity, positive predictive value, and diagnostic accuracy of UFC were lower when the upper limit of reference range (i.e. >80 µg/24 h; 221 nmol/24 h) was applied (Table 2
). As interpretation of UFC values in clinical practice is currently based on reference range values, we used this lower cut-off for subsequent analyses.
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We also compared the diagnostic performance of MSC with MNC within the area of overlap in UFC values between CS and PC (i.e. UFC
206 µg/24 h; 569 nmol/24 h; 14 patients with CS and 33 with PC). Using the above-mentioned criteria, there were no differences in terms of sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, predictive values, or AUC between MSC and MNC (Table 3
).
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| Discussion |
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The measurement of cortisol in saliva has several advantages over its determination in serum. It is a stress-free diagnostic procedure, particularly useful when blood sampling is difficult (21) and venipuncture-induced cortisol elevation may occur and may represent a valid alternative to UFC in those patients who fail to properly collect urine over 24 h. In addition, it is an accurate index of free, biologically active, serum cortisol (22), unaffected by the estrogen milieu, which is known to increase corticosteroid-binding globulin levels. Lastly, saliva can be easily collected at home without medical assistance, and salivary samples can be stored at room temperature for several days and then mailed to the laboratory (23).
Thus, MSC appears to meet the requirements of a first-line test for the screening of hypercortisolism in large populations of patients at risk for CS, such as those affected by visceral obesity, poorly controlled type 2 diabetes mellitus, depression, and osteoporosis.
In our experience, using the 0.35 µg/dl (9.7 nmol/liter) cut-off obtained from ROC analysis, MSC yielded 93% sensitivity, comparable to the diagnostic detection rates of UFC and MNC. We also calculated the inherent diagnostic accuracy of each test, as assessed by the ROC AUC, which is independent of any specific threshold value. Both of these strategies confirmed a satisfactory diagnostic accuracy for MSC, which was superimposable to that of the other tests. Of note, the discriminative ability of MSC was also confirmed within the area of overlap in UFC values (
569 nmol/24 h) between CS and PC.
We also observed a high degree of concordance between the diagnoses established by MSC and MNC; likewise, the accuracy of combined results of salivary and urinary cortisol approached that of the serum/urinary cortisol combination. All of these findings indicate that MSC, in addition to UFC, may represent a valid alternative to MNC in the screening for CS. However, as none of the available screening procedures yields an absolute accuracy, more than one test should be performed to reliably detect all patients with CS.
In agreement with previous reports (12), UFC concentrations were correlated with salivary cortisol values at 0800 and 2400 h only in patients with CS. This is not surprising, as cortisol levels in saliva correlate with urinary cortisol excretion in excess of the corticosteroid-binding globulin saturation (
20 µg/dl; 552 nmol/liter). Thus, MSC may be used as an alternative to UFC to assess the degree of hypercortisolism in CS and possibly identify patients at greater risk for cortisol-induced complications (24).
As for the diagnostic performance of MSC, different assays for measurement of cortisol in saliva at bedtime have been used, and several cut-off points have been proposed, ranging from 0.13 µg/dl (3.6 nmol/liter) (12) to 0.28 µg/dl (7.7 nmol/liter) (13) and 0.55 µg/dl (15.2 nmol/liter) (16). Although the two former studies adopted lower cut-off values obtained from the distribution of salivary cortisol levels in normal subjects (i.e. 97.5th percentile value and subtraction of three times the intraassay CV from the morning value, respectively) (12, 13), Papanicolau and co-workers (16) computed the sensitivities of UFC, MNC, and MSC at 100% specificity for CS. Disappointingly, this latter approach may be affected by the presence of outliers among controls. In any case, despite the use of different criteria and cut-offs values, the sensitivity of MSC was 9293% in both previous series (12, 13, 16) and in our study.
In conclusion, MSC can be recommended as a first-line diagnostic test for CS in both low risk (simple obesity) and high risk (PC states) patients. Given its convenience and diagnostic accuracy, this test may profitably be added to traditional screening procedures, such as UFC and MNC. Until widely acceptable thresholds are generated, however, each center should establish its own reference range and cut-off points.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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Received February 24, 2003.
Accepted May 19, 2003.
| References |
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