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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency: reliable diagnosis by steroid analysis of random urine collections.

The feasibility of performing steroid analysis by capillary gas chromatography on random urine samples for the detection of mild late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency was evaluated. Comparisons were made of basal excretions of androgen and 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone metabolites with plasma levels (basal and stimulated) of 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone and testosterone in six patients with the disorder. The following steroid metabolite excretion ratios were determined for normal controls and affected individuals. 1) 17 alpha-hydroxypregnanolone/tetrahydrocortisone + tetrahydrocortisol + 5 alpha-tetrahydrocortisol (cortisol metabolites) (normal 0.017-0.10, affected 0.17-0.42); 2) pregnanetriol/cortisol metabolites (normal 0.03-0.15, affected 0.17-0.99); 3) pregnanetriolone/cortisol metabolites (normal 0.02-0.014, affected 0.08-0.20); 4) androsterone + etiocholanolone/cortisol metabolites (normal 0.26-1.02, affected 0.34-1.47). Among the 21-deoxy steroid ratios, there was no overlap between affected and unaffected individuals. Two of six affected individuals had androsterone + etiocholanolone/cortisol metabolite ratios in the normal range. This method provides excellent discrimination between normal and affected individuals, precluding the need for an ACTH-stimulation test. It is anticipated that it will be increasingly used for diagnosis of the condition.[1]

References

  1. Late-onset 21-hydroxylase deficiency: reliable diagnosis by steroid analysis of random urine collections. Shackleton, C.H., Irias, J., McDonald, C., Imperato-McGinley, J. Steroids (1986) [Pubmed]
 
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