Circulating and Urinary Catecholamines in Pheochromocytoma

Abstract
Three biochemical tests for the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma were evaluated in 24 patients with proved tumors and 40 patients whose clinical picture was suspect but who had no evidence of the disease. Measurement of resting, supine plasma catecholamines (by radioenzymatic assay) was more useful than either 24-hour urinary vanillyl-mandelic acid (VMA) or metanephrines or both. In only one of 23 patients with pheochromocytoma were plasma catecholamines within the range of those in patients without pheochromocytoma, as compared with urinary VMA in 11 of 22, urinary metanephrines in five of 22 and both metabolites in three of 22.