Back to Search Start Over

Short-term biological variation of plasma uracil in a Caucasian healthy population

Authors :
Anne Winther-Larsen
Anne Tranberg Madsen
Peter H. Nissen
Elke Hoffmann-Lücke
Eva Greibe
Source :
Larsen, A W, Madsen, A T, Nissen, P H, Hoffmann-Lücke, E & Greibe, E 2023, ' Short-term biological variation of plasma uracil in a Caucasian healthy population ', Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine .
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Walter de Gruyter GmbH, 2023.

Abstract

Objectives Plasma uracil is a new biomarker to assess the activity of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase before cancer treatment with fluoropyrimidine drugs. Knowledge on the biological variation of plasma uracil is important to assess the applicability of plasma uracil as a biomarker of drug tolerance and efficacy. Methods A total of 33 apparently healthy individuals were submitted to sequential blood draws for three days. On the second day, blood draws were performed every third hour for 12 h. Plasma uracil was quantified by LC-MS/MS. The within-subject (CVI) and between-subject (CVG) biological variation estimates were calculated using linear mixed-effects models. Results The overall median value of plasma uracil was 10.6 ng/mL (range 5.6–23.1 ng/mL). The CVI and CVG were 13.5 and 22.1%, respectively. Plasma uracil remained stable during the day, and there was no day-to-day variation observed. No differences in biological variation components were found between sex and no correlation to age was found. Four samples were calculated to be required to estimate the homeostatic set-point ±15% with 95% confidence. Conclusions Plasma uracil is subject to tight homeostatic regulation without semidiurnal and day-to-day variation, however between-subject variation exists. This emphasizes plasma uracil as a well-suited biomarker for evaluation of dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase activity, but four samples are required to establish the homeostatic set-point in a patient.

Details

ISSN :
14374331 and 14346621
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (CCLM)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dad48fcd61ffb5b0f83534551b54e896
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2022-1167