Alcohol and Alcoholism Vol. 38, No. 5, pp. 415-420, 2003
© 2003 Medical Council on Alcohol
DIAGNOSTIC CHARACTERISTICS OF DIFFERENT CARBOHYDRATE-DEFICIENT TRANSFERRIN METHODS IN THE DETECTION OF PROBLEM DRINKING: EFFECTS OF LIVER DISEASE AND ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION
1 Departments of Clinical Chemistry and
2 Psychiatry, EP Central Hospital, Seinäjoki,
3 University of Tampere, Finland and
4 Addiction Research Foundation, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
(Received 3 March 2003; first review notified 7 April 2003; in revised form 23 April 2003; accepted 1 May 2003)
Aims: Due to methodological heterogeneity, conflicting views have been expressed on the validity of CDT measurements in the detection of alcohol misuse. Methods: We compared the characteristics of the conventional CDTect method and the Axis turbidimetric CDT assays in the assessment of 62 alcoholics, who were either with (n = 33) or without (n = 29) liver disease, as analysed by combined clinical, laboratory, and morphological indices. Controls were 45 healthy volunteers who were either social drinkers or abstainers. Results: In the total sample of alcoholics, the sensitivity of the %CDT method, which excludes the trisialotransferrin isoform from the measurement, was 63% for men and 46% for women, as compared to 65% and 36% of CDTect, respectively. Both of these methods showed higher sensitivities than the %CDTTIA method, which reacts with trisialotransferrin (32% and 25%, respectively). The assay specificities were 100% for men and 91% for women with %CDT, and 96% and 87% with the CDTect, respectively. The correlation between the CDTect and %CDT method was higher in men (r = 0.86) than in women (r = 0.57). The presence of liver disease was found to influence the results of the CDTect method, such that the highest CDT concentrations were observed in patients with mild to moderate liver disease, especially among women, whereas the %CDT method was less sensitive to the effect of liver pathology. The self-reported alcohol consumption from the 4 weeks prior to sampling showed a higher correlation between the %CDT results (r = 0.64, P < 0.0001) than with the CDTect results (r = 0.40; P < 0.01). Conclusions: The data indicate that the new %CDT method offers advantages over the previous versions of the CDT methods. The improved characteristics may be most useful in assays for excessive alcohol consumption in female alcoholics, patients with liver disease, and in patients with abnormal serum transferrin concentrations.
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