Inpatient Measurements of Urine Metanephrines are Indistinguishable from Pheochromocytoma: Retrospective Cohort Study - 31/07/21
, Jessica Boyd, PhD b, c, Hossein S.M. Sadrzadeh, PhD b, c, Alexander A. Leung, MD, MPH a, dAbstract |
Background |
Pheochromocytoma is a rare cause of acute cardiovascular disease; however, any severe illness may have high catecholamines, simulating pheochromocytoma. We determined the spectrum of urine metanephrines from inpatient and outpatient collections without pheochromocytoma, compared with confirmed pheochromocytoma patients.
Methods |
Retrospective analysis using centralized laboratory data serving all outpatients and hospitals in southern Alberta. The analysis comprised 24-hour urine normetanephrine and metanephrine (UNM-UMN) results collected from hospital inpatients, community outpatients, and patients from a comprehensive provincial pheochromocytoma registry.
Results |
There were 974 unique inpatients (including 132 from intensive care), 6802 outpatients, and 58 pheochromocytoma patients. Among outpatient, general ward, and intensive care unit (ICU) patients, 18.7%, 34.4%, and 67.4% of results, respectively, were supranormal. Although pheochromocytoma patients had higher median UNM-UMN vs inpatients, there was substantial overlap. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis showed area under the curve (AUC) of 0.64-0.91 to detect true pheochromocytoma (P < .0001), with progressively poorer discrimination among hospitalized and ICU-dependent patients. A 24-hour urine normetanephrine >6.95 nmol/d had 98% specificity for pheochromocytoma when inpatient general ward samples were included, but only 46% sensitivity and 13% positive predictive value for pheochromocytoma. Considering ICU collections, 98% specificity required results more than fivefold above the upper reference limit and still had poor positive predictive value. A model combining both UNM and UMN results as a cross-product marginally improved the ROC AUC, but improved sensitivity in outpatients and ward patients but not ICU patients.
Conclusion |
There is a high degree of overlap in UNM-UMN between hospitalized patients and pheochromocytoma; high test specificity is not achieved in this population unless >3-5 times the upper reference limit.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Adrenal mass, Critical care, Hypertension, Paraganglioma, Pheochromocytoma
Plan
| Funding: None. |
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| Conflicts of Interest: None. |
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| Authorship: GK conceived the study, analyzed the data, and wrote the first draft; JB acquired and set up the database and contributed to the first draft; HS supervised and supported the data acquisition and critically reviewed the manuscript and analysis; AL critically reviewed the analysis, figures, and manuscript, and co-wrote the final draft. |
Vol 134 - N° 8
P. 1039 - août 2021 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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