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Biological variation of serum thyrotropin and thyroid hormones concentrations determined at 8‐week intervals for 1year in clinically healthy cats

BackgroundCats commonly develop thyroid disease but little is known about the long‐term biological variability of serum thyroid hormone and thyrotropin (thyroid‐stimulating hormone; TSH) concentrations.ObjectivesWe aimed to determine the long‐term biological variation of thyroid hormones and TSH in...

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Published in:Veterinary clinical pathology 2023-09, Vol.52 (3), p.493-502
Main Authors: Prieto, Jennifer M, Carney, Patrick C, Smith, Stephanie M, Miller, Meredith L, Rishniw, Mark, Randolph, John F, Salerno, Valerie J, Lamb, Steve V, Place, Ned J, Giosi Farace, Peterson, Sarah, Peterson, Mark E
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Language:English
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Summary:BackgroundCats commonly develop thyroid disease but little is known about the long‐term biological variability of serum thyroid hormone and thyrotropin (thyroid‐stimulating hormone; TSH) concentrations.ObjectivesWe aimed to determine the long‐term biological variation of thyroid hormones and TSH in clinically healthy cats.MethodsA prospective, observational study was carried out. Serum samples for analysis of total thyroxine (T4, by radioimmunoassay [RIA] and homogenous enzyme immunoassay [EIA]), triiodothyronine (T3), free T4 (by dialysis), and TSH were obtained every 8 weeks for 1 year from 15 healthy cats, then frozen until single‐batch analysis. Coefficients of variation (CV) within individual cats (CVI) and among individual cats (CVG), as well as the variation between duplicates (ie, analytical variation [CVA]) were determined with restricted maximum likelihood estimation. The indices of individuality (IoI) and reference change values (RCVs) for each hormone were calculated.ResultsSome thyroid hormones showed similar (total T4 by EIA) or greater (TSH) interindividual relative to intraindividual variation resulting in intermediate to high IoI, consistent with previous studies evaluating the biological variation of these hormones weekly for 5–6 weeks. By contrast, total T4 (by RIA) and free T4 had a low IoI. Total T3 had a high ratio of CVA to CVI; therefore, interindividual variation could not be distinguished from analytical variation. No seasonal variability in the hormones could be demonstrated.ConclusionsClinicians might improve the diagnosis of feline thyroid disease by establishing baseline concentrations for analytes with intermediate‐high IoI (total T4, TSH) for individual cats and applying RCVs to subsequent measurements.
ISSN:0275-6382
1939-165X
DOI:10.1111/vcp.13251