1. Gamma Glutamyl Transferase Activity Has Limited Utility in Assessment of Alkaline Phosphatase Elevations.
- Author
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Geno KA, Poore B, Cervinski MA, and Nerenz RD
- Subjects
- Bone and Bones, Humans, Isoenzymes, Sensitivity and Specificity, Alkaline Phosphatase, gamma-Glutamyltransferase
- Abstract
Introduction: As part of an ongoing effort to improve healthcare value for patients, laboratories increasingly implement test utilization review. Alkaline phosphatase (ALP) isoenzymes (hereafter: isoenzymes) testing distinguishes the various ALP isoforms to explain elevations in total serum ALP. Gamma glutamyl transferase activity (GGT) has served as a proxy for total ALP elevations attributable to the hepatic isoform given that both are membrane-bound proteins with a shared mechanism of release. We assessed the utility of GGT in evaluating isoenzymes requests., Methods: We obtained 8 years of isoenzymes results and identified same-patient GGT measurements obtained within 7 days. We assessed the ability of GGT to predict elevations in hepatic, bone, intestinal, and nonhepatic ALP isoforms overall. We generated ROC curves and calculated sensitivity and specificity using our in-house reference limits for GGT., Results: GGT as a predictor of hepatic isoform elevation had an area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 0.68, and GGT activity above the upper reference limit was 46.6% sensitive and 85.0% specific for hepatic ALP elevation. GGT activity as a predictor of nonhepatic isoform elevation had an AUC of 0.52, and GGT within reference limits was 59.8% sensitive and 46.4% specific for elevation in a nonhepatic ALP isoform. In 133 individuals with hepatic isoform elevations, 93 had a concurrent elevation in a nonhepatic ALP isoform., Conclusion: GGT was reasonably specific but insensitive for hepatic ALP isoform elevation and was a poor predictor of ALP isoform elevation overall, suggesting that its usefulness in evaluating isoenzymes orders is limited., (© American Association for Clinical Chemistry 2021. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2021
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