Urine Metanephrines Elevation: Key Conditions
Elevated 24-hour urine fractionated metanephrines (metanephrine and normetanephrine) indicate a hyperadrenergic state. Most commonly these elevations are looked for when working up secondary hypertension, but the differential spans tumors, severe physiological stress, and pharmacological effects.
1. Catecholamine-Secreting Tumors
These are the primary pathological targets when ordering this assay. Tumors typically cause elevations greater than 2 to 3 times the upper limit of normal.
- Pheochromocytoma: The classic neuroendocrine tumor of the adrenal medulla.
- Paraganglioma: Extra-adrenal tumors arising from sympathetic (secreting) or parasympathetic (usually non-secreting) ganglia.
- Neuroblastoma and Ganglioneuroma: Tumors of neural crest origin, primarily seen in pediatric populations.
2. Severe Physiological Stress
Any condition triggering a massive endogenous sympathetic surge can cause mild to moderate elevations (usually less than twice the upper limit of normal).
- Acute Cardiovascular Events: Acute myocardial infarction, acute decompensated heart failure, and cardiogenic shock.
- Critical Illness: Sepsis, massive trauma, severe burns, or prolonged surgery.
- Obstructive Sleep Apnea (OSA): The repetitive hypoxic stress leads to sustained sympathetic overactivity.
- Metabolic Crises: Diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) or severe hypoglycemia.
- Withdrawal Syndromes: Rebound hypertension from the abrupt cessation of clonidine, or severe alcohol withdrawal.
3. Pharmacological Causes
Medications are the most common cause of false-positive results, either by physiologically increasing catecholamine levels or by interfering directly with the laboratory assay (though modern assays have reduced analytical interference).
- Antidepressants: SNRIs (e.g., venlafaxine, duloxetine), Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs), and MAO Inhibitors.
- Sympathomimetics: Pseudoephedrine, albuterol, amphetamines, and illicit substances like cocaine.
- Parkinson’s Medications: Levodopa can cause significant elevations in both plasma and urine metanephrines.
- Antihypertensives: Alpha-blockers (like phenoxybenzamine) and direct vasodilators can cause reflex sympathetic activation.
- Assay Interferences: High doses of acetaminophen, buspirone, or labetalol (which can falsely elevate normetanephrine levels in older HPLC assays).