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SAT-748 Advantages and Limitations of an Integrative Measurement for All Serum Androgens and Anti-Androgens

Background: Analytic measurements of a hormone in bodily fluids are a cornerstone of clinical evaluation. However, clinical presentation may be affected also by currently unmeasured modulators of hormonal function. An alternative could be to measure the cumulative effect of all factors present in a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Schaufele, Fred J, Mody, Armaiti, Huddleston, Heather Gibson
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7208351/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jendso/bvaa046.1612
Descripción
Sumario:Background: Analytic measurements of a hormone in bodily fluids are a cornerstone of clinical evaluation. However, clinical presentation may be affected also by currently unmeasured modulators of hormonal function. An alternative could be to measure the cumulative effect of all factors present in a bodily fluid on the function of a hormone receptor. Prior studies showed an androgen receptor (AR) BioAssay to accurately measure urine androgens in males undergoing testosterone (T) supplementation (1). The factors integrated by the AR BioAssay include androgens, anti-androgens and, in serum, androgen binding proteins affecting ligand availability. Methods: The AR BioAssay was exposed to male and female serum samples obtained from the CDC’s Hormone Standardization (HoSt) Program, and to female serum samples from the UCSF PCOS Tissue Bank registry. AR activity was quantified against a testosterone standard curve and recorded as ‘T-equivalent’ (‘T-eq’) androgen activity units. Results: In 40 CDC HoSt sera added directly (no extraction) to AR BioAssay cells, androgen activities ranged from 2.57 to 298 ng ‘T-eq’/dl. In the 20 ‘male’ CDC HoSt sera (T>150 ng/dl), the androgen activity measurements were uniformly less (0.35 ± 0.10) that of the T-measurement. By contrast, in the 20 ‘female’ CDC HoSt sera, in which T concentrations are typically lower than the affinity of T for sex hormone binding globulins such that more of the T is available to the AR BioAssay, the measured androgen levels were on average 1.45-fold higher than the T concentration. This androgen to T comparison showed high variability in females with 5 of 20 CDC HoSt samples having androgen concentrations more than double that of T (maximum, 6.1-fold). In female serum samples from the PCOS registry, androgens were higher in patients with a PCOS diagnosis (57.7 +/-17.6 ng ‘T-eq’/dl; n = 23) compared to women not meeting formal PCOS criteria (38.1 +/-10.8 ng ‘T-eq’/dl; n = 4); androgen values again averaged 1.40-fold (maximum, 4.9-fold) that of the T measurements, regardless of PCOS diagnosis. Conclusions: Androgen-binding globulins appear to most influence androgen activity levels in male serum. In females, the lower T concentrations may minimize the impact of androgen-binding proteins and permit the impact of non-T androgens to be more pronounced with possible clinical consequence. Further investigations are needed to determine whether functional androgen measurements may improve clinical diagnosis of certain conditions. Reference: (1) Bailey et al (2016) PLoS One11(3):e0151860