Reference ranges of late-night salivary cortisol and cortisone measured by LC–MS/MS and accuracy for the diagnosis of Cushing’s syndrome

Purpose International guidelines recommend salivary cortisol for the diagnosis of Cushing’s syndrome. Despite mass spectrometry-based assays are considered the analytical gold-standard, there is still the need to define reference intervals and diagnostic accuracy of such methodology. Methods 100 hea...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of endocrinological investigation 2020-12, Vol.43 (12), p.1797-1806
Hauptverfasser: Ponzetto, F., Settanni, F., Parasiliti-Caprino, M., Rumbolo, F., Nonnato, A., Ricciardo, M., Amante, E., Priolo, G., Vitali, S., Anfossi, L., Arvat, E., Ghigo, E., Giordano, R., Mengozzi, G.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Purpose International guidelines recommend salivary cortisol for the diagnosis of Cushing’s syndrome. Despite mass spectrometry-based assays are considered the analytical gold-standard, there is still the need to define reference intervals and diagnostic accuracy of such methodology. Methods 100 healthy volunteers and 50 consecutive patients were enrolled to compare LC–MS/MS and electrochemiluminescence assay for the determination of late-night salivary cortisol and cortisone. Moreover, we aimed to determine reference intervals of salivary steroids in a population of healthy individuals and diagnostic accuracy in patients with suspected hypercortisolism and in a population including also healthy individuals. Results Method comparison highlighted a positive bias (51.8%) of immunoassay over LC–MS/MS. Reference intervals of salivary cortisol (0.17–0.97 µg/L), cortisone (0.84–4.85 µg/L) and ratio (0.08–0.30) were obtained. The most accurate thresholds of salivary cortisol for the diagnosis of hypercortisolism were 1.15 µg/L in the population with suspected hypercortisolism (AUC 1) and 1.30 µg/L in the population including also healthy individuals (AUC 1). Cut-off values of salivary cortisone (7.23 µg/L; Se 92.9%, Sp 97.2%, AUC 0.960 and Se 92.9%, Sp 99.1%, AUC 0.985 in suspected hypercortisolism and in overall population, respectively) and cortisol-to-cortisone ratio (0.20; Se 85.7%, Sp 80.6%, AUC 0.820 and Se 85.7%, Sp 85.5%, AUC 0.855 in suspected hypercortisolism and in overall population, respectively) were accurate and similar in both populations. Conclusion LC–MS/MS is the most accurate analytical platform for measuring salivary steroids. Obtained reference intervals are coherent with previously published data and diagnostic accuracy for diagnosis of overt hypercortisolism proved highly satisfactory.
ISSN:1720-8386
0391-4097
1720-8386
DOI:10.1007/s40618-020-01388-1