Differences in radioimmunoassay results for thyroglobulin that affect management of patients with thyroid cancer.

1984 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-86 ◽  
Author(s):  
M F Bayer ◽  
I R McDougall

Abstract We compared two commercial assays for measurement of serum thyroglobulin [Nuclear Medical Systems (NMS) and "CIS" (Damon Diagnostics)] with each other and with one developed at Stanford (J Clin Endocrinol Metab 49:557-564, 1979). The NMS assay is a competitive-binding RIA, the CIS and Stanford assays are two-site immunoradiometric assays. The kit standards varied in thyroglobulin concentration. The NMS standards differed in immunoreactivity from thyroglobulin in clinical specimens and from the other standards. Also, nonparallelism between standards and patients' sera in the NMS assay suggested a less-specific antiserum. Results by the CIS and Stanford assays correlated well (n = 120, r = 0.964), those by the NMS assay less strongly (n = 101, r = 0.855 vs CIS, r = 0.888 vs Stanford). Clinical evaluation in 50 patients treated for differentiated thyroid carcinoma (10 with metastases and 40 currently disease-free) indicated good agreement for positive results by the three assays. The CIS and the Stanford assay both gave high results (greater than or equal to 25 micrograms/L) in all 10 cases with metastases; the NMS RIA identified eight of these patients (thyroglobulin greater than or equal to 30 micrograms/L), but excluded two with anti-thyroglobulin autoantibodies. In subjects without disease, however, the percentage of undetectable thyroglobulin (negative result), as opposed to low measurable thyroglobulin (inconclusive result) varied considerably: 85% by CIS, 30% by NMS, and 75% by the Stanford assay.

2006 ◽  
Vol 0 (0) ◽  
pp. 061109020454001-??? ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen A. Heemstra ◽  
Ying Y. Liu ◽  
Marcel Stokkel ◽  
Job Kievit ◽  
Eleonora Corssmit ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Pierpaolo Trimboli ◽  
Valentina Zilioli ◽  
Mauro Imperiali ◽  
Luca Giovanella

AbstractBackground:Serum thyroglobulin (Tg) is essential to manage differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC). However, Tg determination is affected by circulating Tg antibodies (TgAb), and a role of TgAb as surrogate biomarker has been proposed. Here we evaluated the role of TgAb measured before and after radioiodine ablation (RRA) as potential predictors of prognosis.Methods:Patients treated since 2006 were screened. Cancers with structural relapse were defined as recurrent. Both Tg and TgAb were measured by immunoassays on the fully automated KryptorResults:A series of 215 DTC patients was enrolled, of whom 28.8% had positive preablation TgAb. Overall, 2.8% patients died by DTC and 11% recurred. High-risk class (p=0.004) and cancer relapse (p=0.007) occurred more frequently in positive TgAb, whereas better disease-free survival was observed in negative group (hazard ratio 2.59, p=0.01). Having positive preablation TgAb was significantly associated with risk to develop recurrence (odds ratio 3.57, p=0.004). Among positive TgAb subgroup, higher levels were recorded in recurrent cases (p=0.0001), and the most accurate preablation TgAb threshold was 107.5 IU/mL. When TgAb were measured at first follow-up, recurrence rate was significantly (p<0.0001) higher in persistently TgAb-positive patients (75%) than normalized ones (2.4%). At that time, the highest negative predictive value could be obtained when considering TgAb normalization (<33 IU/mL) or reduction by ≥36.4%.Conclusions:Positive TgAb before RRA indicates higher risk of poor prognosis, but their significant drop 6–12 months later could be considered a favorable factor.


1987 ◽  
Vol 26 (03) ◽  
pp. 139-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Arning ◽  
O. Schober ◽  
H. Hundeshagen ◽  
Ch. Ehrenheim

In the follow-up of differentiated thyroid carcinoma it is discussed whether the tumormarker thyroglobulin can replace the1311 scan, especially when the thyroglobulin serum level is normal. A positive1311 scan of metastases in the follow-up of patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma combined with a low serum thyroglobulin level is extremely rare. The literature shows a frequency of about 4%. Recently we found 3 cases with a positive1311 scan demonstrating pulmonary and bone metastases whereas the serum thyroglobulin level was low.


Head & Neck ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 34 (10) ◽  
pp. 1369-1371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luca Giovanella ◽  
Emanuela Toffalori ◽  
Renato Tozzoli ◽  
Marco Caputo ◽  
Luca Ceriani ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-125
Author(s):  
Vesna Ignjatovic ◽  
Milovan Matovic ◽  
Vladimir Vukomanovic

AbstractCirculating thyroglobulin measurements is a highly specific test in the management of patients affected by differentiated thyroid cancer after total thyroidectomy, followed by radioiodine ablation. The aim of our study was to compare two thyroglobulinimmunoradiometric assays (INEP, Serbia and Cisbio Bioassays, France). Study included 42 patients of both genders with DTC. The subjects were on suppres¬sive doses of levothyroxine and followed up. Results showed concordance between the two assay methods for determining serum thyroglobulin for 39 (92.85%) patients. Statistical analysis showed that there was a direct correlation between two IRMA tests, with a positive correlation coefficient r=0.613 (p 0.05). We concluded that there is good agreement between the two thyroglobulin assays compared in this study.


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