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Testing
About lab tests
Sensitivity and specificity of tests for porphyria
Sensitivity
is a feature of many of the diagnostic tests for porphyrias,
especially when they are done at or near the time of symptoms.
Tests that are sensitive for diagnosis of active porphyrias are
almost always abnormal when symptoms of porphyria are present.
But the tests vary in specificity, meaning that some of the tests
(those with lower specificity) are abnormal in other diseases.
In choosing a test to screen for a disease that is not only uncommon
but also causes symptoms that mimic more common diseases, it is
obviously important to choose a test that is both sensitive and
specific. Fortunately, some tests for porphyria have both of these
features. With such tests, it should always be possible to determine
if symptoms might be due to one of the porphyrias.
Table 1. Diseases due to deficiencies of specific enzymes of
the heme biosynthetic pathway
The enzymes and their intermediates
(substrates and products) are shown in sequence. Some intermediates
are porphyrinogens (reduced porphyrins); these are excreted and
measured mostly as oxidized porphyrins (shown when you click on
a highlighted enzyme name). A deficiency of the first enzyme, ALAS,
causes a type of anemia rather than a porphyria. (Uroporphyrinogen
I synthase is an obsolete term for PBGD and is not shown in the
Table.)
Porphyria should be suspected quite frequently, because the symptoms
that suggest the diagnosis are common. If a diagnosis of porphyria
is not made promptly, serious consequences to the patient may
follow. But more often than not, laboratory testing will show
that the patient does not have porphyria, because other diseases
with symptoms that mimic porphyria are much more common. An effective
approach to laboratory testing must be one that does not often
miss the diagnosis and also does not often incorrectly suggest
that porphyria is present.
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