S. Fisker et al., INFLUENCE OF GROWTH-HORMONE BINDING-PROTEIN ON GROWTH-HORMONE ESTIMATION IN DIFFERENT IMMUNOASSAYS, Scandinavian journal of clinical & laboratory investigation, 58(5), 1998, pp. 373-381
Growth hormone (GH) quantitation in biological fluids varies depending
on the assays employed, and factors which may interfere in the assays
include the high affinity GH-binding protein (GHBP). To evaluate this
potential effect on GH estimates, we studied the influence of adding
increasing amounts of high affinity glycosylated GHBP to normal, acrom
egalic and GH-deficient sera, which were then processed in four differ
ent immunoassays. Two commercial immunometric assays, Delfia and Nicho
ls (assays 1 and 2), and two RIAs, one using a polyethylene glycol (PE
C) precipitation (assay 3) and one using wick-chromatography (assay 4)
for separation of free and bound I-125-GH, were employed. In the Delf
ia assays, GH estimates of 11 sera decreased (p < 0.05) to 87.2 +/- 2.
6%, 73.0 +/- 12.7% and 60.1 +/- 2.5% (mean +/- SEM) of basal GH estima
tes with the addition of GHBP in concentrations of 0.54, 2.14 and 6.42
nmol/l, respectively. In the Nichols assay, GH estimates were not sig
nificantly reduced (93.4 +/- 2.6%, 83.8 +/- 4.5% and 83.9 +/- 3.9%) wi
th the applied GHBP concentrations. In assay 3 (RIA), the addition of
GHBP increased GH estimates to 122 +/- 10.0% and 167 +/- 19.1% (both p
< 0.05) with the addition of GHBP in concentrations of 2.14 and 6.42
nmol/l, respectively, whereas an increase in GHBP concentration of 0.5
4 nmol/l did not change the estimates from basal levels (99.0 +/- 4.8%
, p > 0.05). In assay 4 (RIA), the addition of GHBP induced decreased
GH estimates. With this varying influence of GHBP on GH estimates, bin
ding protein interference should be taken into consideration when comp
aring GH estimates obtained with many currently utilized GH immunoassa
ys. The present results demonstrate that GHBP levels within physiologi
cal range may interfere with the results of GH assays, giving either s
puriously high or low values depending on the GH assay methodology.