Tuesday, March 29, 2016

Seasonal variations not found in a third study

I wrote 2 years ago on the seasonal variations of plasma normetanephrine levels in patients without pheo. In early 2014, a paper reported that the normetanephrine levels are 20% higher in wintertime than in summertime in the Netherlands and Germany, and a second study showed that normetanephrine levels are 40% higher in wintertime than in summertime in Los Angeles, USA. As the Netherlands and Germany have temperate climate and Los Angeles has Mediterranean climate, higher normetanephrine levels in wintertime seem to be pretty universal. At that time, I suggested a similar study in a tropical area like Hawaii with minimal temperature differences throughout the year. One would predict that the plasma normetanephrine levels in people without pheo remain unchanged throughout the year in Hawaii.

A third study is indeed done, although not in Hawaii, and published recently. It is done in the West of Ireland. Ireland has a temperate oceanic climate. The average summertime and wintertime temperatures are 14.3 and 5.8 °C respectively in the West of Ireland. The temperature difference of 8.4 °C in the West of Ireland is very similar to that in Los Angeles (8.6 °C), although it is generally much cooler in the West of Ireland (average Los Angeles summertime and wintertime temperatures are 23.2 and 14.6 °C respectively). The seasonal temperature differences are much smaller in the West of Ireland and Los Angeles than those in the Netherlands and Germany (17 °C). Unlike in Los Angeles, there is, however, no difference in the plasma normetanephrine levels between the summertime and wintertime in the West of Ireland.

There could be multiple potential explanations of the different result obtained from the third study. An obvious issue is that all three studies are retrospective ones which can lead to certain biases. The most important lesson, however, is that medical studies need to be reproduced in different settings. We cannot assume that results from a previous study should be readily applied to another setting.

Dr. Pheo