Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10847676 | Steroids | 2015 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Plasma estrogen measurement with use of radioimmunoassays has been instrumental in the development of aromatase inhibitors for endocrine therapy of postmenopausal breast cancer. However, due to low plasma estrogen concentrations in postmenopausal women, direct radioimmunoassays lack the sensitivity required. While certain laboratories have developed highly sensitive assays for research purposes revealing plasma estrogen suppression consistent with results from tracer studies, such assays are time and labor-consuming due to need for pre-analytical chromatographic purification, sample concentration and sometimes conversion of precursors to products. While novel chromatographic methods involving mass spectrometry analysis are likely to replace such radioimmunoassays in the future, so far a limited number of laboratories have developed suitable assays with a detection limit (around 1Â pM) that is required for analyzing plasma estrogen levels in patients during treatment with potent aromatase inhibitors.
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Authors
Per Eystein Lønning,