Test ID NTXPR NTX-Telopeptide, 24 Hour, Urine
Useful For
1. An adjunct in the diagnosis of medical conditions associated with increased bone turnover
2. The differential diagnosis of osteomalacia versus osteoporosis
3. Identifying individuals with osteoporosis with elevated bone turnover and consequent increased risk for rapid disease progression
4. Prediction of bone densitometry response to antiresorptive therapy of osteoporosis
5. Monitoring and assessing effectiveness of therapy in patients treated for osteopenia, osteoporosis, Paget disease, or other disorders treated with antiresorptive therapy
6. An adjunct in monitoring response to other therapeutic intervention in diseases with increased bone turnover (eg, rickets, osteomalacia, hyperthyroidism)
Indications 3 through 5 have been endorsed by the Negotiated Rulemaking Committee of HCFA and are therefore federally reimbursed.
Profile Information
Test ID | Reporting Name | Available Separately | Always Performed |
---|---|---|---|
NTXUR | NTX-Telopeptide, U | No | Yes |
NTXCT | Creatinine, U | No | Yes |
Special Instructions
Method Name
NTXUR: VITROS Competitive Chemiluminescence Immunoassay
NTXCT: Enzymatic Colorimetric Assay
Reporting Name
NTX-Telopeptide, USpecimen Type
UrineContainer/Tube: Plastic, 13-mL urine tube
Specimen Volume: 4 mL
Collection Instructions:
1. Collect urine for 24 hours.
2. No preservative.
3. Refrigerate specimen during collection.
Additional Information:
1. 24-Hour volume is required.
2. 24-Hour collection is preferred, but second-morning voided or random specimen is also acceptable.
3. See Urine Preservatives in Special Instructions for multiple collections.
Urine Preservative Collection Options
Ambient |
No |
Refrigerated |
<5 days |
Frozen |
Preferred |
6N HCl |
No |
50% Acetic Acid |
No |
Na2CO3 |
No |
Toluene |
Yes |
6N HNO3 |
No |
Boric Acid |
Yes |
Thymol |
No |
Specimen Minimum Volume
0.5 mL
Specimen Stability Information
Specimen Type | Temperature | Time |
---|---|---|
Urine | Frozen (preferred) | 30 days |
Refrigerated | 5 days |
Clinical Information
Human bone is continuously remodeled through a process of osteoclast-mediated bone formation and resorption. This process can be monitored by measuring serum and urine markers of bone formation and resorption. Approximately 90% of the organic matrix of bone is type I collagen, a helical protein that is cross-linked at the N- and C-terminal ends of the molecule. The amino acid sequences and orientation of the cross-linked alpha 2 N-telopeptide of type 1 collagen make it a specific marker of human bone resorption. N-terminal telopeptide (NTx) molecules are mobilized from bone by osteoclasts and subsequently excreted in the urine. Elevated levels of NTx indicate increased bone resorption.
Bone turnover markers are physiologically elevated during childhood, growth, and during fracture healing. The elevations in bone resorption markers and bone formation markers are typically balanced in these circumstances and of no diagnostic value. By contrast, abnormalities in the process of bone remodeling can result in changes in skeletal mass and shape. Many diseases, in particular hyperthyroidism, all forms of hyperparathyroidism, most forms of osteomalacia and rickets (even if not associated with hyperparathyroidism), hypercalcemia of malignancy, Paget disease, multiple myeloma, and bony metastases, as well as various congenital diseases of bone formation and remodeling can result in accelerated and unbalanced bone turnover. Unbalanced bone turnover, usually without increase in bone turnover, is also found in age-related and postmenopausal osteopenia and osteoporosis.
Disease-associated bone turnover abnormalities should normalize in response to effective therapeutic interventions, which can be monitored by measurement of serum and urine bone resorption and formation markers.
Reference Values
All units are reported in nmol Bone Collagen Equivalents/mmol creatinine.
Males
<6 years: 576-1,763
6-13 years: 307-1,367
14-17 years: 102-1,048
≥18 years: 21-66
Females
<6 years: 576-1,763
6-13 years: 307-1,367
14-17 years: 55-378
≥18 years: 19-63
Values are based on Mayo in-house studies of 75 children and adolescents age 3.5 to 18.5 and >100 adults.
Cautions
The intraindividual coefficient of variation of urine N-terminal telopeptide (NTx) measurements is approximately 30%. Part of this variation is due to diurnal fluctuations, and a 24-hour collection is preferred. However, a second-morning void and other random collections are acceptable. In the latter case, it is recommended that the measurement is repeated at least once in order to allow a more accurate estimation of the true average bone turnover in a patient.
Very dilute specimens may not allow measurement of a urine creatinine level and, therefore, reporting of NTx values normalized to creatinine becomes impossible.
Inadvertent collection of urine for NTx measurements in a collection bottle that contains an acidic preservative results in substantial artifactual elevations of apparent NTx concentrations; such specimens are unacceptable.
Day(s) Performed
Monday through Friday, 3rd shift
Report Available
1 dayPerforming Laboratory

Test Classification
This test has been cleared or approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and is used per manufacturer's instructions. Performance characteristics were verified by Mayo Clinic in a manner consistent with CLIA requirements.CPT Code Information
82523