We evaluated a new, commercially available two-site immunoradiometric assay (IRMA) for corticotropin (ACTH) in human plasma. The precision and detection limit were an improvement over radioimmunoassay (RIA). Addition of ACTH 1-24 or ACTH 18-39 to plasma containing ACTH 1-39 resulted in a decrease in measured ACTH. Results by both IRMA and RIA are reported and compared for normal subjects, patients with Cushing's disease, and patients with ectopic ACTH. Effects of administering dexamethasone, metyrapone, ACTH 1-24, and corticoliberin were evaluated. The present assay is more sensitive, specific, and reproducible than RIA. The presence of fragments of ACTH or 'big' ACTH that are reactive in RIA may lead to artifactually low ACTH concentrations by IRMA. Therefore, RIA may still be necessary for differential diagnosis of ectopic ACTH syndromes. However, the IRMA is an improvement for evaluating pituitary-adrenal function in patients with low concentrations of ACTH in plasma.
CITATION STYLE
Raff, H., & Findling, J. W. (1989). A new immunoradiometric assay for corticotropin evaluated in normal subjects and patients with Cushing’s syndrome. Clinical Chemistry, 35(4), 596–600. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/35.4.596
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