Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5509771 | Clinica Chimica Acta | 2017 | 28 Pages |
Abstract
Recent increases in understanding of the complex pathophysiology of CKD, which involves calcium, phosphate and magnesium balance, and is also influenced by vitamin D status and fibroblast growth factor (FGF)-23 production, should facilitate such improvement. Development of evidence-based recommendations about how best to use PTH is limited by considerable method-related variation in results, of up to 5-fold, as well as by lack of clarity about which PTH metabolites these methods recognise. This makes it difficult to compare PTH results from different studies and to develop common reference intervals and/or decision levels for treatment. The implications of these method-related differences for current clinical practice are reviewed here. Work being undertaken by the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC) to improve the comparability of PTH measurements worldwide is also described.
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Authors
Catharine M Sturgeon, Stuart Sprague, Alison Almond, Etienne Cavalier, William D Fraser, Alicia Algeciras-Schimnich, Ravinder Singh, Jean-Claude Souberbielle, Hubert W. Vesper, IFCC Working Group for PTH IFCC Working Group for PTH,