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Test Code DHEAS or LAB524 DHEA Sulfate , Serum or Plasma

Important Note

This test is intended to be performed for orders that appear as:

  • DHEAS
  • DHEA Sulfate

If "S" or "Sulfate" does not appear in the order, please order Mayo sendout DHEAM (LAB522)

Patient Preparation: For 12 hours before this test do not take multivitamins or dietary supplements containing biotin (vitamin B7), which is commonly found in hair, skin, and nail supplements and multivitamins. Biotin can interfere with many immunoassay tests.

Specimen Requirements

Container Type:

Optimal: Gold or Mint*

*For STAT requests

Acceptable: Red or Green

Optimal Collection Volume: 

4.5mL; full tube

Minimum Volume:

1 mL whole blood

Collection Instructions:

Gently invert the sample 5-6 times after collection.

Specimen Transport:

Refrigerate

Processing Instructions: 

1. If serum, allow the specimen to clot for 30 minutes.

2. Centrifuge specimen within 2 hours of collection.

3. After centrifugation, specimen tubes without a gel barrier should have the serum or plasma aliquoted to a false bottom container.

4. Keep serum or plasma refrigerated until testing can be performed.

Specimen Stability

Specimen Type Temperature Time
Serum* Refrigerated 14 days
Room Temperature 5 days
Frozen 12 months

*Note: Heparinized plasma in gel separator tubes is less stable than serum and is only suitable for add-on testing up to 2 days following sample collection.

Specimen Rejection Criteria

Hemolysis Mild OK; Moderate OK; Gross Reject
Lipemia Mild OK; Moderate OK; Gross Reject
Icterus Mild OK; Moderate OK; Gross Reject
Other Quantity not sufficient

Useful For

Elevated levels of DHEAS are associated with hirsutism and virilism. Elevations are also seen in adrenal carcinomas.

Methodology

Roche Cobas - Electrochemiluminescence assay

Reference Ranges

Female and Male aged > 10 years

 

Age (years) 5-95th percentile
Female (ug/dL) Male (ug/dL)
10-14 33.9-280 24.4-247
15-19 65.1-368 70.2-492
20-24 148-407 211-492
25-34 98.8-340 160-449
35-44* 60.9-337 88.9-427
45-54* 35.4-256 44.3-331
55-64 18.9-205 51.7-295
65-74 9.40-246 33.6-249
> 75 12.0-154 16.2-123

*Effects of menopause on the results obtained for the women of the corresponding age groups were tested and found to be negligible.

 

Children aged < 9 years

 

Age 5-95th percentile (ug/dL)
< 1 week 108-607
1-4 weeks 31.6-431
1 month to 1 year 3.4-124
1-4 years 0.47-19.4
5-9 years 2.8-85.2

Interpretive

Elevated dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (DHEA-S) levels indicate increased adrenal androgen production. Mild elevations in adults are usually idiopathic, but levels of 600 mcg/dL or more can suggest the presence of an androgen-secreting adrenal tumor. DHEA-S levels are elevated in more than 90% of patients with such tumors, usually well above 600 mcg/dL. This is particularly true for androgen-secreting adrenal carcinomas, as they have typically lost the ability to produce down-stream androgens, such as testosterone. By contrast, androgen-secreting adrenal adenomas may also produce excess testosterone and secrete lesser amounts of DHEA-S.

 

Patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) may show very high levels of DHEA-S, often 5- to 10-fold elevations. However, with the possible exception of 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase deficiency, other steroid analytes offer better diagnostic accuracy than DHEA-S measurements. Consequently, DHEA-S testing should not be used as the primary tool for CAH diagnosis. Similarly, discovering a high DHEA-S level in an infant or child with symptoms or signs of possible CAH should prompt additional testing, as should the discovery of very high DHEA-S levels in an adult. In the latter case, adrenal tumors need to be excluded and additional adrenal steroid profile testing may assist in diagnosing nonclassical CAH.

 

Girls below the age of 7 to 8 and boys before age 8 to 9, who present with early development of pubic hair, or, in boys, penile enlargement, may be suffering from either premature adrenarche or premature puberty or both. Measurement of DHEA-S (DHES / Dehydroepiandrosterone Sulfate [DHEA-S], Serum), dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA_ / Dehydroepiandrosterone [DHEA], Serum), and androstenedione (ANST / Androstenedione, Serum), alongside determination of sensitive estradiol (EEST / Estradiol, Serum), testosterone and bioavailable (TTBS / Testosterone, Total and Bioavailable, Serum), or free testosterone (TGRP / Testosterone, Total and Free, Serum), sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG / Sex Hormone-Binding Globulin [SHBG], Serum), and luteinizing hormone (LH / Luteinizing Hormone [LH], Serum)/follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH / Follicle-Stimulating Hormone [FSH], Serum) levels will allow correct diagnosis in most cases. In premature adrenarche, only the adrenal androgens, chiefly DHEA-S, will be above prepubertal levels, whereas early puberty will also show a fall in SHBG levels and variable elevations of gonadotropins and gonadal sex-steroids above the prepuberty reference range.

 

Levels of DHEA-S do not show significant diurnal variation.

Many drugs and hormones can result in changes in DHEA-S levels. Whether any of these secondary changes in DHEA-S levels are of clinical significance and how they should be related to the established normal reference ranges is unknown. In most cases, the drug-induced changes are not large enough to cause diagnostic confusion, but when interpreting mild abnormalities in DHEA-S levels, drug and hormone interactions should be taken into account.

 

Examples of drugs and hormones that can reduce DHEA-S levels include: insulin, oral contraceptive drugs, corticosteroids, central nervous system agents that induce hepatic enzymes (eg, carbamazepine, clomipramine, imipramine, phenytoin), many antilipemic drugs (eg, statins, cholestyramine), domapinergic drugs (eg, levodopa/dopamine, bromocryptine), fish oil, and vitamin E.

 

Drugs that may increase DHEA-S levels include: metformin, troglitazone, prolactin, (and by indirect implication many neuroleptic drugs), danazol, calcium channel blockers (eg, diltiazem, amlodipine), and nicotine.

 

Source: Mayo Medical Labs

Day(s) Performed

24/7

Expected TAT

Same day

Performing Laboratory

Bronson Laboratory, Chemistry - Kalamazoo

Sample Retention Time

7 days

CPT Code

82627

LOINC Code

2191-5