The diagnostic performance of copeptin in clinical practice: A prospective study

Clin Endocrinol (Oxf). 2024 Jan 30. doi: 10.1111/cen.15018. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objective: Plasma copeptin is a relatively new biomarker for evaluation of arginine vasopressin (AVP) secretion. The aim of this study was to test the diagnostic performance of copeptin in patients with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome.

Design, patients and measurements: This was a prospective study where 88 patients with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome were evaluated with a water deprivation test (WDT). Weight, urine osmolality, urine specific gravity, and plasma copeptin were collected at baseline, after 8 h, and at termination of the WDT when one of the following had been reached: (i) >3% weight reduction, (ii) urine specific gravity >1.017 or urine osmolality >600 mOsm/kg, or (iii) intolerable adverse symptoms.

Results: Of 88 patients (57 women), 21 (24%) were diagnosed with central diabetes insipidus (cDI), 5 (6%) with nephrogenic DI (nDI), and 62 (71%) with primary polydipsia (PP). Median (interquartile range) copeptin at baseline was 1.7 (1.4-2.5) pmol/L in cDI, 22 (18-65) pmol/L in nDI, and 2.7 (2-4) pmol/L in PP. After 8 h of WDT, the highest copeptin in patients with cDI was 4.0 pmol/L. In patients with PP: (i) 41 had urine osmolality <600 mOsm/kg, 7 (17%) of these had copeptin >4.0 pmol/L, (ii) 21 had urine osmolality ≥600 mOsm/kg, 14 (67%) of these had copeptin >4.0 pmol/L.

Conclusions: Copeptin >4.0 pmol/L after an overnight WDT can be used to rule out cDI and copeptin ≥21 pmol/L at baseline to diagnose nDI. The diagnostic performance of copeptin in the context of the WDT is otherwise limited in the diagnostic work-up of patients with polyuria-polydipsia syndrome.

Keywords: copeptin; diabetes insipidus; diagnostic performance; polyuria-polydipsia syndrome; primary polydipsia.