EDTA blood sample
Fasting required
Must be brought straight to the lab on ice
Gastrin is secreted by G cells in the gastric antrum in response to a meal. It stimulates parietal cells in the fundus of the stomach to secrete gastric acid and also stimulates antral motility and secretion of pepsin and intrinsic factor. In addition to digested food, gastrin secretion is stimulated by calcium, alcohol and high intragastric pH. Gastrin release is inhibited by low gastric pH, secretin, glucagon, calcitonin, somatostatin and vasoactive intestinal peptide. Gastrin levels exhibit a circadian rhythm with lowest values between 03:00 and 07:00. Measurement of serum gastrin concentration is useful in the work-up of the Zollinger Ellison syndrome (ZE).
Gastrin levels should be measured after an overnight fast. Normal fasting gastrin levels usually rule out a gastrinoma, while gastrin levels above 1000 pg/mL with a gastric pH < 2.5 (if measured) are diagnostic of a gastrinoma. Most patients with fasting serum gastrin levels greater than 1500 pg/mL are found to have metastases. However, 60% of patients with ZE have gastrin levels that are elevated but less than 1000 pg/mL. In these cases a secretin provocative test is helpful. A baseline gastrin level is drawn and then an intravenous bolus of 2 to 3 U secretin per kilogram of body weight is administered over 30 seconds. Serum gastrin levels are then measured at 2, 5, 10, 15, and 20 minutes. Normally, no change or a slight suppression of gastrin concentration will be seen. Patients with gastrinoma demonstrate a paradoxical increase of 100 to 200 pg/mL in serum gastrin at 5 minutes with maximum levels reaching several thousand pg/mL. Approximately 90% of ZE patients have a positive secretin test.
Other disorders can elevate serum gastrin levels into the range seen in ZE. A few patients with gastric or duodenal ulcers may have gastrin levels between 100 and 500 pg/mL.
28 days
Referred test
Cannot be added on to an existing request