Home Minimizing the effects of multicollinearity in the polynomial regression of age relationships and sex differences in serum levels of pregnenolone sulfate in healthy subjects
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Minimizing the effects of multicollinearity in the polynomial regression of age relationships and sex differences in serum levels of pregnenolone sulfate in healthy subjects

  • Milan Meloun , Martin Hill and Helena Včeláková-Havlíková
Published/Copyright: March 12, 2009

Abstract

Background: Pregnenolone sulfate (PregS) is known as a steroid conjugate positively modulating N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors on neuronal membranes. These receptors are responsible for permeability of calcium channels and activation of neuronal function. Neuroactivating effect of PregS is also exerted via non-competitive negative modulation of GABAA receptors regulating the chloride influx. Recently, a penetrability of blood-brain barrier for PregS was found in rat, but some experiments in agreement with this finding were reported even earlier. It is known that circulating levels of PregS in human are relatively high depending primarily on age and adrenal activity.

Methods: Concerning the neuromodulating effect of PregS, we recently evaluated age relationships of PregS in both sexes using polynomial regression models known to bring about the problems of multicollinearity, i.e., strong correlations among independent variables. Several criteria for the selection of suitable bias are demonstrated. Biased estimators based on the generalized principal component regression (GPCR) method avoiding multicollinearity problems are described.

Results: Significant differences were found between men and women in the course of the age dependence of PregS. In women, a significant maximum was found around the 30th year followed by a rapid decline, while the maximum in men was achieved almost 10 years earlier and changes were minor up to the 60th year. The investigation of gender differences and age dependencies in PregS could be of interest given its well-known neurostimulating effect, relatively high serum concentration, and the probable partial permeability of the blood-brain barrier for the steroid conjugate.

Conclusions: GPCR in combination with the MEP (mean quadric error of prediction) criterion is extremely useful and appealing for constructing biased models. It can also be used for achieving such estimates with regard to keeping the model course corresponding to the data trend, especially in polynomial type regression models.

Clin Chem Lab Med 2009;47:464–70.


Corresponding author: Prof. RNDr. Milan Meloun, DrSc, Department of Analytical Chemistry, University Pardubice, 532 10 Pardubice, Czech Republic Phone: +42-46-6037026, Fax: +42-46-6037068,

Received: 2008-11-28
Accepted: 2009-1-9
Published Online: 2009-03-12
Published in Print: 2009-04-01

©2009 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Minireview
  2. Risk loci for type 2 diabetes – Quo vadis?
  3. Genetics and Molecular Diagnostics
  4. A common variant in the FTO gene is associated with body mass index in males and postmenopausal females but not in premenopausal females. Czech post-MONICA and 3PMFs studies
  5. Genotype distribution of estrogen receptor α polymorphisms in pregnant women from healthy and preeclampsia populations and its relation to blood pressure levels
  6. Do common genetic variants in endotoxin signaling pathway contribute to predisposition to alcoholic liver cirrhosis?
  7. The selection and application of ssDNA aptamers against MPT64 protein in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  8. Stromal cell-derived factor-1 but not its receptor, CXCR4, gene variants increase susceptibility and pathological development of hepatocellular carcinoma
  9. Expression of lineage markers using real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR) in normal and in leukemia bone marrow
  10. Translation termination and protein folding pathway genes are not correlated in gastric cancer
  11. General Clincial Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
  12. Novel serum paraoxonase activity assays are associated with coronary artery disease
  13. Elevated erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase activity is a novel clinical marker in hyperventilation syndrome
  14. Elevation of the glycoxidation product Nε-(carboxymethyl)lysine in patients presenting with acute myocardial infarction
  15. Lipoprotein(a) level and its association with tumor stage in male patients with primary lung cancer
  16. A high-performance liquid chromatography method for the determination of carbamazepine and carbamazepine-10,11-epoxide and its comparison with chemiluminescent immunoassay
  17. Reference Values and Biological Variations
  18. Minimizing the effects of multicollinearity in the polynomial regression of age relationships and sex differences in serum levels of pregnenolone sulfate in healthy subjects
  19. Determination of physiological plasma pentraxin 3 (PTX3) levels in healthy populations
  20. Validation and Outcome Studies
  21. Analytical precision of the Urolizer® for the determination of the BONN-Risk-Index (BRI) for calcium oxalate urolithiasis and evaluation of the influence of 24-h urine storage at moderate temperatures on BRI
  22. Determination of nitrotyrosine concentrations in plasma samples of diabetes mellitus patients by four different immunoassays leads to contradictive results and disqualifies the majority of the tests
  23. Estimation of trueness of measurement results obtained in external quality assessment
  24. Letters to the Editor
  25. A new PCR-RFLP assay for –1123 G>C polymorphism in the PTPN22 gene: allele and genotype frequencies in a western Mexican population
  26. Proposed classification of various limit values (guide values) used in assisting the interpretation of quantitative laboratory test results
  27. Case report: Over-substitution of thyroxine due to interference in serum thyroid-stimulating hormone measurement
  28. Rv2629 191A/C nucleotide change is not associated with rifampicin resistance in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Downloaded on 5.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/CCLM.2009.104/pdf
Scroll to top button