ECE2014 Poster Presentations Cardiovascular Endocrinology & Lipid Metabolism (41 abstracts)
Department of Endocrinology, The Centre of Postgraduate Medical Education, Warsaw, Poland.
Introduction: Primary aldosteronism (PA) is one of the causes of hypertension. Blood aldosterone and the aldosterone/direct renin concentration (DRC) are routinely used as a screening test for PA.
Aim of study: Whether it matters if aldosterone concentration is determined in serum or plasma samples?
Material and methods: 145 healthy males, five females (blood donors) were investigated. In all subjects blood was collected into two tubes: one in EDTA2K (plasma) and one with clot activator (serum). Aldosterone was measured by RIA kit (ZenTch, Belgium), and renin by immunoradiometric kit (CIS bio, France).
Results: In blood donors, the median (and the range) of aldosterone concentration determined in serum was 145 pg/ml (56369 pg/ml) and in plasma 289 pg/ml (172664 pg/ml). These differences ranged 4175% (median 50%). Correlation between aldosterone in serum and plasma was r=0.9089; r2=0.9385; P<0.01, but plasma aldosterone levels appeared significantly higher in relation to serum aldosterone levels (P<0.0001).
The median and the range of serum aldosterone to plasma DRC indices was 13 (245) and of plasma aldosterone to plasma DRC 26 (599). These differences ranged 3168% (median 50%). Correlation between both indices was r=0.9523; r2=0.9429; P<0.0001, but plasma aldosterone/DRC indices appeared to be significantly higher than serum aldosterone/DRC indices (P<0.0001).
Conclusions: i) Marked differences between the serum and plasma aldosterone levels demand application of separate reference ranges.
ii) Aldosterone/DRC indices may differ significantly depending on whether aldosterone levels are measured in serum or plasma.