A new assay method that detects only intact osteocalcin. Two-step non-invasive diagnosis to predict adynamic bone disease in haemodialysed patients
Authors: Morishita, T.1; Nomura, M.1; Hanaoka, M.1; Saruta, T.1; Matsuo, T.1; Tsukamoto, Y.1
Source: Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, Volume 15, Number 5, May 2000 , pp. 659-667(9)
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Key:
- Free Content
- New Content
- Subscribed Content
- Free Trial Content
Abstract:
Background. We studied the usefulness of a new assay method that detects only the intact human osteocalcin molecule in haemodialysed patients.Methods. Iliac bone biopsy specimens obtained from 62 haemodialysed patients were analysed.Results. Bone formation rates (BFR/BS) correlated positively with serum intact osteocalcin concentrations (n=62), osteocalcin concentrations assayed by a conventional method (n=31), parathyroid hormone (PTH) concentrations (n=62), and total alkaline phosphatase concentrations (r=0.602, 0.588, 0.650, and 0.401 respectively). Based on ROC curve and Youden index analysis, the optimal cut-off value to distinguish adynamic bone disease from a mild lesion was 195 pg/ml of serum PTH concentration (Youden index=0.233) or 30 ng/ml of serum intact osteocalcin concentration (Youden index=0.628). The optimal cut-off value to distinguish between hyperparathyroid bone and a mild lesion was 455 pg/ml of serum PTH level (Youden index=0.63) or 50 ng=ml of serum intact osteocalcin concentration (Youden index=0.634). Since both ROC curve and Youden index suggested that the serum PTH concentration was not a good marker to distinguish adynamic bone from a mild lesion or hyperparathyroid bone, we designed a two-step procedure. The first step was the diagnosis of adynamic bone (cut-off: 65 pg/ml) or hyperparathyroid bone (cut-off: 455 pg/ml) according to serum PTH concentration. In a second step, we assessed serum intact osteocalcin concentration in patients with serum PTH concentrations between 65 and 455 pg/ml. The cut-off values for adynamic and hyperparathyroid bone in this diagnostic approach were 30 and 70 ng/ml respectively. As a result, 49 out of 62 patients were diagnosed properly. The Youden index of this two-step diagnosis was 0.527 and 0.661 for adynamic bone and hyperparathyroid bone respectively. Sensitivity markedly improved to 94.4% and 96.2% for adynamic bone and hyperparathyroid bone respectively, without sacrificing specificity (84.0 and 88.8% respectively).Conclusion. Measurement of serum intact osteocalcin concentration is useful for the diagnosis of adynamic bone in haemodialysed patients. A two-step procedure involving also simultaneous measurement of serum PTH concentration further improved the sensitivity of each individual marker while maintaining specificity.Keywords: bone formation rates; haemodialysed patients; hype
Document Type: Original article
Affiliations: 1: Division of Nephrology, Fourth Department of Medicine, Kitasato University School of Medicine, Kanagawa, Japan
Key:
- Free Content
- New Content
- Subscribed Content
- Free Trial Content

Click here for Page Help