Radioimmunoassay of testosterone not bound to sex-steroid-binding protein in plasma.

H Dechaud, H Lejeune, M Garoscio-Cholet… - Clinical …, 1989 - academic.oup.com
H Dechaud, H Lejeune, M Garoscio-Cholet, R Mallein, M Pugeat
Clinical chemistry, 1989academic.oup.com
To measure the concentration of testosterone (T) that is not bound to sex-steroid-binding
protein (SBP) in plasma, we quantified by radioimmunoassay the T in the supernates of
plasma samples after precipitation with 50%-saturated ammonium sulfate. The
concentrations of non-SBP-bound T. directly measured with this assay, correlated
significantly (P less than 0.001) with those deduced from measurement of the percentage of
non-SBP-bound T determined with [3H] T as tracer or from mathematical models according …
Abstract
To measure the concentration of testosterone (T) that is not bound to sex-steroid-binding protein (SBP) in plasma, we quantified by radioimmunoassay the T in the supernates of plasma samples after precipitation with 50%-saturated ammonium sulfate. The concentrations of non-SBP-bound T. directly measured with this assay, correlated significantly (P less than 0.001) with those deduced from measurement of the percentage of non-SBP-bound T determined with [3H]T as tracer or from mathematical models according to the law of mass action. It also correlated significantly with the ratio of T to SBP and with the concentration of nonbound T. As determined with this assay, the mean concentration of non-SBP-bound T in normal men was higher in young (4.67, SD 2.68 nmol/L; n = 30) than in older (greater than 40 years) subjects (2.48, SD 1.61 nmol/L; n = 35; P less than 0.001) and lower than normal in hyperthyroid (1.61, SD 0.91 nmol/L; P less than 0.01) or infertile men (3.28, SD 1.70 nmol/L; P less than 0.01). In women, non-SBP-bound T was higher in hirsute patients (0.24, SD 0.11 nmol/L; P less than 0.01) and was lower during pregnancy (0.09, SD 0.05 nmol/L; P less than 0.05) than in normal women during the follicular phase (0.16, SD 0.07 nmol/L). We conclude that this direct measurement of non-SBP-bound T in plasma is suitable for routine use and represents a reliable index of androgenicity in human pathology, particularly when alterations of the binding capacity of SBP modify the concentrations of total T.
Oxford University Press