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International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health logoLink to International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
. 2020 Nov 6;17(21):8199. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17218199

Global Prevalence of Macroprolactinemia among Patients with Hyperprolactinemia: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Noor Azlin Azraini Che Soh 1, Najib Majdi Yaacob 2,*, Julia Omar 1, Aniza Mohammed Jelani 1, Noorazliyana Shafii 1, Tuan Salwani Tuan Ismail 1, Wan Norlina Wan Azman 1, Anis Kausar Ghazali 2
PMCID: PMC7664288  PMID: 33171973

Abstract

Hyperprolactinemia (hPRL) often poses a diagnostic dilemma due to the presence of macroprolactin. Understanding the prevalence of macroprolactinemia (mPRL) has an important implication in managing patients with hPRL. The primary aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of mPRL globally and to explore selected factors influencing the prevalence estimate. Studies with original data related to the prevalence of mPRL among patients with hPRL from inception to March 2020 were identified, and a random effects meta-analysis was performed. Of the 3770 records identified, 67 eligible studies from 27 countries were included. The overall global prevalence estimate was 18.9% (95% CI: 15.8%, 22.1%) with a substantial statistical heterogeneity (I2 = 95.7%). The highest random effects pooled prevalence was observed in the African region (30.3%), followed by Region of the Americas (29.1%), European (17.5%), Eastern Mediterranean (13.9%), South-East Asian (12.7%), and Western Pacific Region (12.6%). Lower prevalence was observed in studies involving both sexes as compared to studies involving only female participants (17.1% vs. 25.4%) and in more recent studies (16.4%, 20.4%, and 26.5% in studies conducted after 2009, between 2000 and 2009, and before 2000, respectively). The prevalence estimate does not vary according to the age group of study participants, sample size, and types of polyethylene glycol (PEG) used for detection of macroprolactin (PEG 6000 or PEG 8000). With macroprolactin causing nearly one-fifth of hPRL cases, screening for mPRL should be made a routine before an investigation of other causes of hPRL.

Keywords: macroprolactin, macroprolactinemia, big-big prolactin, prolactin, hyperprolactinemia, prevalence, meta-analysis

1. Introduction

Prolactin (PRL) is a hormone secreted by lactotroph cells within the adenohypophysis. PRL is synthesized as a prehormone with a molecular weight of 26 kDa [1]. PRL exists in different forms in human serum. The predominant form is monomeric PRL (little PRL) with a molecular mass of 23 kDa. The other forms include dimeric PRL (big PRL) with a molecular mass of 48–56 kDa, and another form is polymeric PRL, also known as macroprolactin (big-big PRL), with molecular mass >150 kDa. In the normal sera, monomeric PRL accounts for 80–95% of the total PRL, dimeric PRL makes up <10%, and macroprolactin accounts for a small amount of less than 1% of the total PRL [2].

The monomeric PRL is known to be biologically and immunologically active, and when it is in excess, it will cause hyperprolactinemia (hPRL) [2]. When the serum of a patient with hPRL contains mostly macroprolactin, the condition is termed macroprolactinemia (mPRL) [3,4]. In up to 90% of cases, macroprolactin is composed of a complex formed by an IgG and monomeric PRL [4,5,6]. Macroprolactin has a prolonged clearance rate like that of immunoglobulins [7].

Macroprolactin is confined to the vascular system and has limited access to the PRL receptor of target organs owing to limited bioactivity in vivo resulting in asymptomatic hPRL [8,9]. In true hPRL, the common clinical syndromes include galactorrhoea, oligomenorrhoea, or amenorrhoea, and infertility in women and reduced libido, oligospermia or impotence or both, and galactorrhoea in men but not in mPRL. However, it causes diagnostic confusion when it is coincidentally associated with hyperprolactinemic syndrome’s non-specific symptoms. In these circumstances, the symptoms may be mistakenly attributed to true hPRL [10,11]. Therefore, the differentiation between true hPRL and mPRL cannot be made solely based on clinical symptoms. Although macroprolactin is generally biologically inactive, it can be measured by almost all immunoassays for PRL [7,12,13,14]. This may lead to misdiagnosis and unnecessary medical and surgical intervention [15,16] or delayed diagnosis, and inappropriate treatment [17,18].

Screening of hPRL sera for the presence of misleading concentrations of mPRL must be included in the routine investigation of all hyperprolactinemic patients. The reference method for the determination of macroprolactin is gel filtration chromatography (GFC), which allows quantitation of all high molecular mass forms of PRL and an estimate of their molecular mass. Although the GFC method is accurate and reproducible, it is expensive, labor-intensive, and time-consuming. Many alternative techniques have been described based on immunoassay of serum PRL before and after removal of macroprolactin by ultrafiltration, immunoadsorption of IgG species with protein A, protein G, or anti-human IgG and precipitation with polyethylene glycol (PEG) [19,20,21].

PEG precipitation is the best, most widely used method and recommended worldwide for detecting macroprolactin as this method is reproducible, easily performed, and effective. One limitation of PEG precipitation has been reported in which the presence of PEG in the sample can interfere with some PRL immunoassay procedures [22]. To overcome this problem, each laboratory must establish its reference intervals derived from PEG-treated sera of healthy individuals [11,15].

Although many studies have reported the prevalence of mPRL among hPRL using various immunoassay analyzers, different methods of detection for mPRL, different cut-off PRL levels for the screening of mPRL, and various cut-off recovery post-PEG, a systematic literature review on the prevalence of mPRL had not been performed to date. The primary objectives of this study were to conduct a systematic literature review and meta-analysis on the prevalence of mPRL, summarize the findings of these studies, and explore selected factors that may influence prevalence estimates.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Protocol and Registration

This systematic review and meta-analysis followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) checklist. The protocol was registered in the PROSPERO international prospective register of systematic reviews (PROSPERO registration number: CRD42019123884).

2.2. Data Sources and Search Strategies

Two investigators (N.A.A.C.S. and N.M.Y.) extensively searched online international databases subscribed by our institutional library (PubMed, EMBASE, Cochrane Library Database, SAGE, Scopus, EBSCO Academic Search Complete, EBSCO PsycINFO, ProQuest, Elsevier, ScienceDirect, Google Scholar, and Emerald Insight) from inception to 30 March 2020. The search terms were MeSH terms and text words linked to mPRL and hPRL using a combination of the following search terms: “polymeric prolactin”, “macroprolactin”, “macroprolactinemia”, “macroprolactinaemia”, “big big prolactin”, “BBPRL”, “big prolactin”, “BPRL”, “hyperprolactinemia”, “hyperprolactinaemia”, “elevated prolactin”, “excess prolactin”, “high prolactin”. The search strategy was tested in two databases (PubMed, Elsevier ScienceDirect) and was further refined based on its ability to retrieve known relevant studies according to each database. Forward and backward reference chaining of included studies were carried out in which the reference lists from the included papers were searched to identify other relevant information. A systematic literature search of multiple databases using search terms as listed above was conducted to search for articles published in peer-reviewed literature, clinical trial registries, conference proceedings, and gray literature. To maximize sensitivity rather than the specificity of the literature search, we did not include “prevalence”, “incidence”, “proportion”, or “frequency” as the search term.

2.3. Study Eligibility

Two investigators (N.A.A.C.S. and N.M.Y.) independently screened all titles and abstracts from the initial search results and full-text articles identified from the first-stage screening (titles and abstract). Studies that reported primary data on the prevalence of mPRL from inception to 30 March 2020 were included. Searches were conducted in English, and publications in all languages were considered. Any observational (cross-sectional, cohort, longitudinal) studies were eligible for inclusion if the study reported the target population of interest (hPRL patients regardless of cause) and on study outcomes (prevalence or frequency of mPRL among hPRL patients). Experimental (randomized, non-randomized) trials, case-control studies, ecological studies, case reports, studies that did not involve human participants (animal, in vitro studies), book chapters, narrative reviews, and protocol studies were excluded.

2.4. Data Extraction

Search results from each database were downloaded in a standardized tag format developed by Research Information Systems (.ris) or NBIB format (.nbib). In databases that do not allow all search results to be downloaded at once (e.g., Google Scholar, EMBASE), search results were downloaded in partitions and later merged in Microsoft Windows command prompt (cmd) using this command: “copy *.ris mergefile.ris”. The search results were then imported into Zotero software to remove duplicates. After removing duplicates, the search result was exported as Microsoft Excel.csv format and later converted to .xlsx format.

Preliminary screening of titles and abstracts was conducted by two investigators (N.A.A.C.S. and N.M.Y.) to identify potential articles of interest. The full text of potentially eligible studies was retrieved and re-assessed for inclusion/exclusion criteria. Assessment of eligibility was made in duplication and independently to avoid bias in study selection. The degree of change-adjusted agreement between the two review authors was noted and statistically assessed by Kappa statistics. Conflicts in study identification were resolved by discussion and in conjunction with a third investigator (J.O.) to obtain 100% agreement with the final decision. A detailed assessment of why studies were excluded after the full-text review was prepared.

After study identification, data from included studies were abstracted by two investigators (N.A.A.C.S. and N.M.Y.) using a standardized pre-design and pre-piloted electronic data abstraction form in Microsoft Excel format to assess study quality and for evidence synthesis. Data abstractions were conducted independently to minimize the risk of errors. The information abstracted included: author’s name, publication year, country, region, study design, study population, operational definition of hPRL, diagnostic test for hPRL, diagnostic test for mPRL, the cut-off point for the diagnostic test used for diagnosis of mPRL, number of study participants (hPRL), and number of participants with the outcome of interest (mPRL).

When there were multiple publications of the same study, data were extracted from each publication, but only the most “complete” and up-to-date data were included. The data were analyzed following resolution of overlaps in the extracted data. The literature search and screening output were reported in a Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) study flow diagram.

2.5. Quality Assessment

The quality of each included study (assessment of bias) was critically and objectively appraised by two investigators (N.A.A.C.S. and N.M.Y.) independently and in duplicate, using adapted quality assessment tool for prevalence studies [23]. The tool consists of 10 items addressing three domains of bias (selection, nonresponse, measurement bias) and a summary score classifying the study as low, medium, or high risk of bias. All disagreement was resolved by discussion with the involvement of a third review author (J.O.).

2.6. Statistical Analyses

The qualitative synthesis omitted studies with a high risk of bias. Aggregate level data was used for data synthesis, and a summary of all the findings in the included studies was provided. A meta-analysis of the prevalence was conducted using the metaprop module in STATA software version 14.1 (Stata Corporation, College Station, TX, USA). A random effects meta-analysis was performed to obtain the pooled prevalence with the corresponding 95% confidence interval (95% CI) and forest plot. Confidence intervals for the pooled estimates were calculated after the Freeman–Tukey double arcsine transformation. The possibility of statistical heterogeneity among included studies was estimated by Cochran’s Q (reported with a χ2 and p-value) and the I2 statistic. The I2 statistic describes the fraction of the variability in effect that is due to heterogeneity rather than sampling error. A p-value of less than 0.10, rather than the conventional level of 0.05, is used to determine statistical significance of heterogeneity.

Publication bias was assessed using Egger’s test and funnel plot. Sensitivity analysis was performed by eliminating individual studies one at a time. Alteration in the pooled prevalence and the 95% CI were examined to assess the stability of the meta-analysis. Subgroup analyses were conducted according to region, sex, age group, year period when the study was published, and types of PEG used for the detection of macroprolactin. The random effect pooled prevalence estimate with the corresponding 95% CI, the within-group heterogeneity, and the between-group heterogeneity tests were reported. A p-value for this test of less than 0.10 indicates a statistically significant subgroup (interaction) effect. As an extension to subgroup analysis, individual variable meta-regression was conducted to investigate the effect of continuous study characteristics (sample size and year of studies) and a p-value of less than 0.05 was considered for statistical significance.

3. Results

3.1. Study Selection and Characteristics

After removal of duplicates, 3770 records were screened by their titles and abstracts from which 171 articles qualified for a full-text review. Forward and backward reference chaining of articles during full-text review identified six extra articles. In total, 177 articles were assessed for eligibility in full text, and from these, 67 studies reported on the prevalence of mPRL among patients with hPRL and fulfilled other eligibility criteria (Figure 1: Flow of information diagram). The final sample of 67 studies published between 1985 and 2019 from 27 countries was included, involving 16,951 patients with hPRL. The largest proportion of studies came from the European Region (37 studies, 55.2%) followed by Region of the Americas (14 studies, 20.9%), Western Pacific Region (7 studies, 10.4%), Eastern Mediterranean Region (4 studies, 6.0%), South-East Asia Region (3 studies, 4.5%), and African Region (2 studies, 3.0%).

Figure 1.

Figure 1

Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flowchart.

Large heterogeneity between studies was observed concerning the method of hPRL and mPRL detection, as listed in Table 1. The majority of the included studies (56 studies) utilized a single method to detect hPRL, eight utilized a combination of two methods, two studies utilized a combination of three methods, and one study utilized a combination of four methods. The majority of the studies (28 studies) used Chemiluminescence Immunoassay (CLIA) as the method of detecting hPRL, and 24 studies used the Electrochemiluminescence Immunoassay (ECLIA) method. For the diagnosis of mPRL, 47 studies used a single method, 20 studies used a combination of two methods, and one study used a combination of three methods. PEG is the most used method for diagnosis of mPRL, 47 studies used PEG 6000, 6 studies used PEG 8000, and 10 studies used PEG but did not specify whether it was PEG 6000 or PEG 8000. GFC was used in 20 studies for the diagnosis of mPRL. Various recovery cut-off points were used for diagnosis of mPRL, and most of the studies used <40% PRL recovery as the cut-off.

Table 1.

Details of studies on the prevalence of macroprolactinemia among patients with hyperprolactinemia, sorted by year.

No Author Year Country Design Age group Sex Specific Condition of hPRL Method of PRL Detection Method of Macroprolactin Detection Cut off Recovery (%) n hPRL n mPRL
1 Larrea et al. [24] 1985 Mexico cross-sectional Adult Female No RIA GFC - 12 3
2 Fahie-Wilson et al. [25] 1997 UK cross-sectional Adult Both No FIA, EIA, CLIA PEG 6000, GFC - 69 17
3 Vieira et al. [26] 1998 Brazil cross-sectional Unspecified Both No FIA PEG 6000, GFC 30 1220 513
4 Olukoga et al. [27] 1999 UK cross-sectional Adult Both No FIA PEG 6000 40 188 29
5 Blanco-Favela et al. [28] 2001 Mexico cross-sectional Teenage Both SLE patients IRMA PEG, Protein G Sepharose - 32 7
6 Leaños-Miranda et al. [29] 2001 Mexico cross-sectional Unspecified Both SLE patients IRMA PEG 6000, GFC - 43 14
7 Sánchez-Eixerés et al. [30] 2001 Spain cross-sectional Adult Both No ECLIA PEG 6000, GFC 40 211 19
8 Schiettecatte et al. [19] 2001 Belgium cross-sectional Unspecified Both No ECLIA PEG 6000, GFC 50 175 38
9 Leslie et al. [31] 2001 UK cross-sectional Adult Female No FIA PEG 6000 40 1225 322
10 Smith et al. [32] 2002 UK cross-sectional Adult Both No EIA, CLIA, ECLIA, IFMA PEG, GFC - 300 71
11 Hauache et al. [33] 2002 Brazil cross-sectional Adult Both No FIA PEG 6000, GFC 30 113 52
12 Sapin et al. [34] 2002 France cross-sectional All age Male No CLIA, ECLIA PEG 6000 40 34 14
13 Vallette-Kasic et al. [35] 2002 France cross-sectional All age Both No CLIA GFC - 1106 106
14 Toldy et al. [36] 2003 Hungary cross-sectional All age Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 270 62
15 Strachan et al. [37] 2003 UK cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000 50 273 58
16 García Menéndez et al. [38] 2003 Spain cross-sectional Adult Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 50 195 39
17 García et al. [39] 2004 Argentina cross-sectional Adult Both SLE patients IRMA PEG 6000, GFC - 34 7
18 Escobar-Morreale et al. [40] 2004 USA cross-sectional Adult Female Hyperandrogenic CLIA PEG 6000 40 8 4
19 Rivero et al. [41] 2004 Spain cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000, GFC 54 96 11
20 Galoiu et al. [42] 2005 Romania cross-sectional Adult Both No IRMA, ECLIA GFC, protein A precipitation - 84 16
21 Germano et al. [43] 2005 Italy cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000 40 172 37
22 Gibney et al. [18] 2005 Ireland cross-sectional Adult Both No FIA PEG 8000 - 2089 453
23 Theunissen et al. [44] 2005 Belgium cross-sectional Adult Both No EIA, RIA, ECLIA PEG 6000 40 77 14
24 Hattori et al. [45] 2006 Japan cross-sectional Teenage and adult Both No ELISA PEG 6000 40 159 18
25 Alfonso et al. [46] 2006 USA cross-sectional Adult Both No ECLIA PEG 50 82 40
26 Álvarez-Vázquez et al. [47] 2006 Spain cross-sectional Teenage and adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000 75 228 22
27 Rivas-Espinosa et al. [48] 2006 Mexico others Adult Both No EIA PEG 6000 50 30 7
28 Donadio et al. [49] 2007 Italy retrospective cohort Adult Both No FIA PEG 6000 40 135 57
29 Jokar et al. [50] 2008 Iran cross-sectional Teenage and adult Both SLE patients RIA PEG 40 9 5
30 Baǧdatoǧlu et al. [51] 2008 Turkey cross-sectional All age Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 124 13
31 Vilar et al. [52] 2008 Brazil cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA, IRMA PEG 30 1234 115
32 Alfadda et al. [53] 2008 Saudi Arabia retrospective cohort All age Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 156 10
33 Jassam et al. [54] 2009 UK cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000, GFC 40 409 16
34 Don-Wauchope et al. [55] 2009 South Africa cross-sectional All age Both No CLIA PEG 6000 60 170 48
35 Hattori et al. [9] 2010 Japan cross-sectional Adult Both No EIA PEG 6000 40 292 44
36 Anaforoglu et al. [56] 2010 Turkey case-control Adult Female No CLIA PEG 8000 40 34 14
37 McCudden et al. [11] 2010 USA cross-sectional Adult Female No CLIA PEG 6000 40 120 20
38 Gulcelik et al. [57] 2010 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 40 174 76
39 Taghipour et al. [58] 2011 Iran cross-sectional Adult Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 188 32
40 Can et al. [10] 2011 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Female No CLIA PEG 6000 40 84 31
41 Morteza et al. [59] 2011 Iran longitudinal Adult Both hPRL due to hypothalamus or stalk compression IRMA PEG 40 37 3
42 Thirunavakkarasu et al. [60] 2012 India cross-sectional Adult Female Infertility ECLIA PEG 40 183 21
43 Sari et al. [61] 2012 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Both Type 2 diabetes ECLIA PEG 8000 40 40 13
44 Isik et al. [62] 2012 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000 40 337 88
45 Tamer et al. [63] 2012 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Female No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 161 60
46 Chawla et al. [64] 2012 Ethiopia cross-sectional Adult Female No ECLIA PEG, GFC 40 100 34
47 Lu et al. [65] 2012 Taiwan cross-sectional Adult Both No IRMA PEG 6000 40 70 15
48 Kim et al. [66] 2013 Korea cross-sectional Adult Both Major depression on SSRI CLIA PEG 8000 52.8 6 0
49 Leaños-Miranda et al. [67] 2013 Mexico cross-sectional Adult Female Gynecological disorder EIA PEG 6000, GFC - 326 57
50 Alpañés et al. [68] 2013 Spain cross-sectional Adult Female No CLIA PEG 6000 40 16 2
51 Radavelli-Bagatini et al. [69] 2013 Brazil longitudinal Adult Female No IRMA PEG 6000 40 32 9
52 Jamaluddin et al. [70] 2013 Malaysia cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000, GFC 40 204 9
53 Elenkova et al. [71] 2013 Bulgaria case-control Adult Both Prolactinoma RIA PEG 8000 40 131 10
54 Whitehead et al. [72] 2014 Britain cross-sectional Unspecified Both No CLIA PEG 6000 - 175 26
55 Hayashida et al. [73] 2014 Brazil cross-sectional Adult Female PCOS FIA PEG 6000 30 34 16
56 Silva et al. [74] 2014 Portugal cross-sectional Unspecified Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 96 2
57 Beda-Maluga et al. [75] 2015 Poland cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG, Ultrafiltration, GFC 40 245 27
58 Parlant-Pinet et al. [76] 2015 France cross-sectional Adult Both No RIA, ECLIA PEG 6000, GFC 30 222 63
59 Che Soh et al. [77] 2016 Malaysia cross-sectional Adult Both No ECLIA PEG 8000 40 133 9
60 Chen et al. [78] 2016 China cross-sectional All age Both No CLIA, ECLIA PEG 6000, GFC 60 122 38
61 Hattori et al. [79] 2016 Japan cross-sectional Adult Female No EIA, CLIA PEG 6000, GFC 40 37 2
62 Akbulut et al. [80] 2017 Turkey cross-sectional Unspecified Both No CLIA, ECLIA PEG 6000 40 376 19
63 Soto-Pedre et al. [81] 2017 UK longitudinal Unspecified Both No CLIA, ECLIA unknown - 1301 97
64 Dogansen et al. [82] 2018 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Both Prolactinomas ECLIA PEG 6000 40 66 0
65 Kalsi et al. [83] 2018 India cross-sectional Adult Both No CLIA PEG 6000 25 102 22
66 Barth et al. [84] 2018 UK cross-sectional Unspecified Both No CLIA PEG 6000 60 672 36
67 Ayan et al. [85] 2019 Turkey cross-sectional Adult Both No ECLIA PEG 6000 40 73 10

n: Number of patients with, RIA: Radioimmunoassay, FIA: Fluoroimmunoassay, CLIA: Chemiluminescence Immunoassay, ECLIA: Electrochemiluminescence Immunoassay, IRMA: Immunoradiometric Assay, IFMA: Immunofluorometric Assay, EIA: Enzyme Immunoassay, ELISA: Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay, PEG: Polyethylene glycol, GFC: Gel Filtration Chromatography, R: Recovery, SLE: Systemic lupus erythematosus, PCOS: Polycystic ovarian syndrome, hPRL: hyperprolactinemia, mPRL: macroprolactinemia, UK: United Kingdom, USA: United States of America.

3.2. Prevalence of Macroprolactinemia among Patients with Hyperprolactinemia

Prevalence of mPRL among patients with hPRL from the included 67 studies ranged from 0.0% to 55.6% with a random effects pooled prevalence of 18.9% (95% CI: 15.8%, 22.1%) (Figure 2). There was a substantial statistical heterogeneity among the individual study estimates [χ2 (66) = 1548.67, p < 0.001, I2 = 95.7%].

Figure 2.

Figure 2

Forest plot of the meta-analysis for the global estimate of the prevalence of macroprolactinemia among patients with hyperprolactinemia.

3.3. Quality Assessment and Publication Bias

Egger’s test for small-study effects indicates that there was no publication bias observed among all the included studies (β = 0.366; standard error of β = 0.418; 95% CI: −0.470, 1.201; t = 0.87, p = 0.385). The symmetry of the funnel plot agrees with the result of Egger’s test (Figure 3). A sensitivity analysis was conducted in which every study was removed in turn. The results showed no significant alterations in pooled prevalence and 95% CI values, indicating high stability of this meta-analysis (Supplementary Materials Table S1).

Figure 3.

Figure 3

Funnel plot of publication bias. ES = Effect size estimate (prevalence).

3.4. Subgroup and Meta-Regression Analyses

Variation in the prevalence estimate according to study region was explored by grouping the studies according to the World Health Organization Member States regions (African Region, Region of the Americas, South-East Asia Region, European Region, Eastern Mediterranean Region, and Western Pacific Region). The highest random effects pooled prevalence was observed in the African region (30.3%), followed by Region of the Americas (29.1%), European (17.5%), Eastern Mediterranean (13.9%), South-East Asian (12.7%), and Western Pacific Region (12.6%).

Further exploration of the variation in the prevalence estimate was made according to sex, age groups, year period of publication, and the types of PEG used for the detection of macroprolactin (PEG 6000 vs. PEG 8000). The summary of estimates and heterogeneity are summarized in Table 2.

Table 2.

Subgroup analysis of the prevalence of macroprolactinemia among patients with hyperprolactinemia.

Study Characteristic Number of Studies Random Effect Pooled Prevalence 95% CI of Pooled Prevalence Within Group Heterogeneity Between Group Heterogeneity
I2 (%) χ2 (df) p-Value χ2 (df) p-Value
Region
European Region 37 17.5 14.0, 21.2 95.7 840.70 (36) <0.001 7.32 (3) 0.062
Region of the Americas 14 29.1 18.5, 41.0 97.1 455.07 (13) <0.001
Western Pacific Region 7 12.6 6.7, 19.9 89.3 55.94 (6) <0.001
South-East Asian Region 3 12.7 4.7, 23.1 - - -
African Region 2 30.3 25.0, 36.0 - - -
Eastern Mediterranean Region 4 13.9 4.8, 26.3 83.8 18.53 (3) <0.001
Sex
Both (male and female) 52 17.1 13.8, 20.6 96.2 1359.49 (51) <0.001 6.56 (1) 0.010
Female only 14 25.4 19.6, 31.6 84.9 86.49 (13) <0.001
Male only 1 41.2 24.6, 59.3 - - -
Age group
Adults only 48 19.8 16.6, 23.2 93.3 697.08 (47) <0.001 0.23 (1) 0.630
Teenagers and adults 10 18.0 11.9, 25.0 92.2 114.91 (9) <0.001
Teenagers only 1 21.9 9.3, 40.0 - - -
Year period
Before 2000 4 26.5 11.2, 45.2 95.4 64.56 (3) <0.001 2.64 (2) 0.267
Between 2000 and 2009 30 20.4 16.5, 24.5 94.6 536.29 (29) <0.001
Between 2010 and 2019 33 16.4 12.4, 20.9 94.3 557.34 (32) <0.001
PEG type
PEG 6000 47 18.8 15.0, 23.0 95.6 1053.67 (46) <0.001 0.06 (1) 0.801
PEG 8000 6 16.7 7.8, 27.7 90.6 53.43 (6) <0.001

PEG: Polyethylene glycol.

For subgroup analysis of age group, eight studies were excluded because those studies did not specify the age group of their study participants. Age groups were classified as either involving adults only, teenagers only, or teenagers and adults. Year periods indicate the period of time when the study was published, categorized as either published before 2000, between 2000 and 2009, or between 2010 and 2019. For PEG type, the studies were categorized to either using PEG 6000 or PEG 8000. Studies that do not report the type of PEG used (n = 14) were excluded.

A statistically significant subgroup difference (interaction) was detected when the subgroup analysis was conducted according to sex (p = 0.010). A lower prevalence estimate was observed among studies involving both male and female participants as compared to studies involving only female participants (17.1% vs. 25.4%).

Meta-regression analysis reveals that the year of the studies had a significant influence on the prevalence where lower prevalence was observed in more recent studies (p = 0.010). No significant association was observed for sample size (p = 0.557) (Table 3).

Table 3.

Individual variable (univariable) meta-regression model for each study characteristic.

Study Characteristic Number of Studies Regression Coefficient (β) Standard Error of β 95% CI of β t p-Value
Sample size 67 −0.00002 0.00003 −0.00008, 0.00004 −0.59 0.557
Year of the study 67 −0.007 0.003 −0.012, −0.002 −2.66 0.010

4. Discussion

This meta-analysis showed an estimated prevalence of mPRL among patients with hPRL of 18.9%. Variation in the prevalence estimate was observed when the subgroup analysis was conducted according to the region. In the Region of the Americas and African Region, the subgroup analysis indicates a higher prevalence of mPRL, whereas in the European, Western Pacific, South-East Asian, and Eastern Mediterranean Region, the prevalence is slightly lower. The interpretation of this subgroup analysis, however, needs to be made with caution due to the small number of studies from the Western Pacific (n = 7), South-East Asian (n = 3), African (n = 2), and Eastern Mediterranean Region (n = 4). One study in the Region of the Americas reported a prevalence of 46%, and this finding reflected selection bias of the study because of the specialized nature of the study center. This center received samples from other laboratories when the possible diagnosis of mPRL was raised [33].

In this current meta-analysis, we could not compare the prevalence estimate between males and females as only one study was conducted with male participants [34]. Comparing studies conducted with female participants only to studies conducted with male and female participants reveals a significant difference. A lower prevalence estimate was observed among studies involving both sexes than studies involving only female participants. Findings from previous studies regarding the matter are inconclusive, with some studies reporting no difference in the prevalence of mPRL between sex [77,86,87,88]. In contrast, some other studies reported a higher prevalence of mPRL among females than males [35,36,51,89]. This could be due to a higher number of female patients being investigated for infertility and menstrual disturbance than men who are only being investigated for sexual dysfunction [69,90].

Subgroup analysis also did not show any difference in prevalence estimate based on age group, similar to other previous studies [49,88]. However, several other studies reported that the prevalence of mPRL tends to increase with advancing age [36,86].

Subgroup analysis by year periods reveals a reduction in the prevalence of mPRL in recent studies. Further evaluation by meta-regression analysis supports the finding and indicates that a lower prevalence estimate was reported in more recent studies. In this meta-analysis, however, we did not find any possible explanation for this variation.

A comparison between the type of PEG that has been used in the precipitation of macroprolactin shows a lower prevalence in studies that used PEG 8000 compared to those that used PEG 6000. However, only six studies used PEG 8000 as compared to 47 studies that used PEG 6000. A previous study reported a significant constant bias between the two macroprolactin precipitation methods. Therefore, they suggest laboratories that use PEG 8000 should consider the transference of the reference interval established with PEG 6000 carefully [91].

Among all studies included in this review, we found that various cut-offs for PRL level have been used for the screening of hPRL and mPRL with different percentages of PRL recovery post-PEG for diagnosis of mPRL. Immunoassays were performed using various systems, such as the Architect, DELFIA, Cobas, Elecsys, and IMMULITE. Variability of the PRL level based on the different immunoassay measurement system has been previously reported [32,79]. Apart from that, heterogeneity in the mPRL screening method between studies was observed. Some authors used only one method for either screening with PEG/ultrafiltration/protein A separation/protein G separation or GFC alone, whereas others chose to combine screening plus confirmation with GFC.

Several limitations need to be noted in this meta-analysis. Significant heterogeneity was identified, even though random effect models were carried out. This limitation is observed in any other meta-analyses of epidemiological studies, in which the source of heterogeneity may result from unreported factors. In this meta-analysis, we decided that it is important to show whether statistically significant subgroup differences exist based on subgroup analysis, even though there is considerable heterogeneity within subgroups. Between-group comparison based on the subgroup analysis, therefore, needs to be made with caution, and we acknowledge the uncertainty in the evidence due to inconsistency between individual study results.

In this meta-analysis, we could not examine the heterogeneity effect of sex (comparison between male and female) as only one study reported the prevalence of mPRL specifically among male hPRL patients. Similarly, the influence of age on the prevalence estimate could not be examined since only one study involved only teenagers, and no study involved only the elderly. All included studies were not race-specific, rendering the variation to be examined. Not all included studies report the exact protocol for sample collection, which may influence the level of PRL such as physiological stress and diurnal variation (serum PRL levels are known to be higher in the afternoon than in the morning). Furthermore, other common conditions that cause variability of PRL levels such as fasting state, exercise, history of drug intake, prior chest wall surgery or trauma, and comorbidities were not reported.

5. Conclusions

To the best of our knowledge, this is the first meta-analysis examining the global prevalence of mPRL among patients with hPRL. The pool prevalence of mPRL was 18.9% among patients with hPRL, indicating that the finding of mPRL is common among patients with hPRL. With macroprolactin causing nearly one-fifth of hPRL cases, screening for mPRL should be made routine before an investigation of other causes of hPRL.

Supplementary Materials

The following are available online at https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/21/8199/s1, Supplementary Table S1: “Leave-one-out” sensitivity analysis for the meta-analysis on the prevalence of macroprolactinemia among patients with hyperprolactinemia.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, N.A.A.C.S., N.M.Y., J.O., A.M.J., N.S., T.S.T.I., W.N.W.A. and A.K.G.; Methodology, N.A.A.C.S., N.M.Y., J.O., A.M.J., N.S., T.S.T.I., W.N.W.A. and A.K.G.; Validation, N.A.A.C.S., N.M.Y. and J.O.; Formal analysis, N.M.Y. and A.K.G.; Data curation, N.A.A.C.S., N.M.Y. and J.O.; Writing—original draft preparation, N.A.A.C.S. and N.M.Y.; Writing—review and editing, N.A.A.C.S., N.M.Y., J.O., A.M.J., N.S., T.S.T.I., W.N.W.A. and A.K.G. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Footnotes

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

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