Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites

Abstract Background Mass spectrometry allows for analysis of multiple hormone and organic acid metabolites from small urine volumes; however, to assess the full extent of daily hormone production, 24-h urine collections are usually required. The aims of this study were, first, to confirm that mass s...

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Main Authors: Mark Newman, Desmond A. Curran
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-03-01
Series:BMC Chemistry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13065-021-00744-3
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spelling doaj-9e0507c605824087bf3bdc76d7231a9b2021-03-21T12:24:29ZengBMCBMC Chemistry2661-801X2021-03-0115111310.1186/s13065-021-00744-3Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolitesMark Newman0Desmond A. Curran1Precision Analytical Inc.Precision Analytical Inc.Abstract Background Mass spectrometry allows for analysis of multiple hormone and organic acid metabolites from small urine volumes; however, to assess the full extent of daily hormone production, 24-h urine collections are usually required. The aims of this study were, first, to confirm that mass spectrometric analysis of an array of hormones and organic acids would yield similar results in both liquid and dried urine, and, second, to determine if collection of four dried spot urine samples could be substituted for a 24-h collection when measuring reproductive hormones. Methods Two study populations were included in this prospective observational study. Twenty individuals collected both a spot liquid urine and dried urine on filter paper to analyze eight organic acids. A second group of 26 individuals collected both a 24-h urine and four dried spot urines during waking hours throughout the same day for evaluation of 17 reproductive hormones and metabolites; data from 18 of these individuals were available to compare liquid versus dried urine results. Dried urine was extracted, hydrolyzed, and derivatized before analysis by mass spectrometry; all analytes from dried urine were normalized to urine creatinine. Results Reproductive hormone results from dried and liquid urine were in excellent agreement with intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) greater than 0.90; comparison of dried to liquid urine for organic acids showed good to excellent agreement (ICC range: 0.75 to 0.99). Comparison between the 4-spot urine collection and 24-h urine collection methods showed excellent agreement (ICC > 0.9) for 14 of the 17 urine metabolites and good agreement for the others (ICC 0.78 to 0.85) with no systematic differences between the two methods of collection. Conclusions The burden of urine collection can be reduced using collection of four spot dried urines on filter paper without compromising comparability with hormone results from a 24-h urine collection. A large number of urine analytes can be assessed from the dried urine with similar results to those from liquid urine. Given the ease of sample handling, this 4-spot dried urine assay would be useful for both clinical assessment of patients and for large epidemiologic studies.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13065-021-00744-3Dried urine testingGC–MS/MSLC–MS/MSReproductive hormonesEstrogenTestosterone
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Newman
Desmond A. Curran
spellingShingle Mark Newman
Desmond A. Curran
Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
BMC Chemistry
Dried urine testing
GC–MS/MS
LC–MS/MS
Reproductive hormones
Estrogen
Testosterone
author_facet Mark Newman
Desmond A. Curran
author_sort Mark Newman
title Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
title_short Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
title_full Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
title_fullStr Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
title_full_unstemmed Reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
title_sort reliability of a dried urine test for comprehensive assessment of urine hormones and metabolites
publisher BMC
series BMC Chemistry
issn 2661-801X
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Abstract Background Mass spectrometry allows for analysis of multiple hormone and organic acid metabolites from small urine volumes; however, to assess the full extent of daily hormone production, 24-h urine collections are usually required. The aims of this study were, first, to confirm that mass spectrometric analysis of an array of hormones and organic acids would yield similar results in both liquid and dried urine, and, second, to determine if collection of four dried spot urine samples could be substituted for a 24-h collection when measuring reproductive hormones. Methods Two study populations were included in this prospective observational study. Twenty individuals collected both a spot liquid urine and dried urine on filter paper to analyze eight organic acids. A second group of 26 individuals collected both a 24-h urine and four dried spot urines during waking hours throughout the same day for evaluation of 17 reproductive hormones and metabolites; data from 18 of these individuals were available to compare liquid versus dried urine results. Dried urine was extracted, hydrolyzed, and derivatized before analysis by mass spectrometry; all analytes from dried urine were normalized to urine creatinine. Results Reproductive hormone results from dried and liquid urine were in excellent agreement with intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) greater than 0.90; comparison of dried to liquid urine for organic acids showed good to excellent agreement (ICC range: 0.75 to 0.99). Comparison between the 4-spot urine collection and 24-h urine collection methods showed excellent agreement (ICC > 0.9) for 14 of the 17 urine metabolites and good agreement for the others (ICC 0.78 to 0.85) with no systematic differences between the two methods of collection. Conclusions The burden of urine collection can be reduced using collection of four spot dried urines on filter paper without compromising comparability with hormone results from a 24-h urine collection. A large number of urine analytes can be assessed from the dried urine with similar results to those from liquid urine. Given the ease of sample handling, this 4-spot dried urine assay would be useful for both clinical assessment of patients and for large epidemiologic studies.
topic Dried urine testing
GC–MS/MS
LC–MS/MS
Reproductive hormones
Estrogen
Testosterone
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13065-021-00744-3
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