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Background
Plasma or urinary metanephrines are recommended for screening of pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs). Measurements of urinary free rather than deconjugated metanephrines and additional measurements of methoxytyramine represent other developments. For all measurements there is need for reference intervals.
Methods
Plasma free, urinary free and urinary deconjugated O-methylated catecholamine metabolites were measured by LC-MS/MS in specimens from 590 hypertensives and normotensives. Reference intervals were optimized using data from 2,056 patients tested for PPGLs.
Results
Multivariate analyses, correcting for age and body surface area, indicated higher plasma and urinary metanephrine in males than females and sex differences in urinary normetanephrine and free methoxytyramine that largely reflected body size variation. There were positive associations of age with plasma metabolites, but negative relationships with urinary free metanephrine and methoxytyramine. Plasma and urinary normetanephrine were higher in hypertensives than normotensives, but differences were small. Optimization of reference intervals using the data from patients tested for PPGLs indicated that age was the most important consideration for plasma normetanephrine and sex most practical for urinary metabolites.
Conclusion
This study clarifies impacts of demographic and anthropometric variables on catecholamine metabolites, verifies use of age-specific reference intervals for plasma normetanephrine and establishes sex-specific reference intervals for urinary metabolites.
Background: Pheochromocytomas and paragangliomas (PPGLs) are rare but potentially harmful tumors that can vary in their clinical presentation. Tumors may be found due to signs and symptoms, as part of a hereditary syndrome or following an imaging procedure. Objective: To investigate potential differences in clinical presentation between PPGLs discovered by imaging (iPPGLs), symptomatic cases (sPPGLs) and those diagnosed during follow-up because of earlier disease/known hereditary mutations (fPPGL). Design: Prospective study protocol, which has enrolled patients from six European centers with confirmed PPGLs. Data were analyzed from 235 patients (37 iPPGLs, 36 sPPGLs, 27% fPPGLs) and compared for tumor volume, biochemical profile, mutation status, presence of metastases and self-reported symptoms. iPPGL patients were diagnosed at a significantly higher age than fPPGLs (P<0.001), found to have larger tumors (P=0.003) and higher metanephrine and normetanephrine levels at diagnosis (P=0.021). Significantly lower than in sPPGL, there was a relevant number of self-reported symptoms in iPPGL (2.9 vs 4.3 symptoms, P< 0.001). In 16.2% of iPPGL, mutations in susceptibility genes were detected, although this proportion was lower than that in fPPGL (60.9%) and sPPGL (21.5%). Patients with PPGLs detected by imaging were older, have higher tumor volume and more excessive hormonal secretion in comparison to those found as part of a surveillance program. Presence of typical symptoms indicates that in a relevant proportion of those patients, the PPGL diagnosis had been delayed. Precis: Pheochromocytoma/paraganglioma discovered by imaging are often symptomatic and carry a significant proportion of germline mutations in susceptibility genes.