Copeptin is a 39-amino acid-long, glycosylated peptide. It is synthesized mainly in the paraventricular neurons of the hypothalamus and in the supraoptical nucleus. During axonal transport, pre-pro-AVP is proteolytically cleaved into vasopressin, and copeptin. These molecules are then stored in secretory granules in the posterior pituitary and released upon osmotic or non-osmotic stimuli.
Function
Once secreted into the bloodstream, there is no known biological role for copeptin. However, when pre-pro-vasopressin is processed during the axonal transport, copeptin may contribute to the 3D folding of vasopressin.
Surrogate vasopressin marker
The size and half-life of copeptin permit an easier immunological testing, compared to vasopressin, and hence copeptin is proposed as a reliable AVP surrogate. The clinical interest in copeptin testing is closely linked to the pathophysiological pathways in which vasopressin is involved: polydipsia-polyuria syndrome, hyponatremia, syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion as well as heart failure and acute coronary syndrome.
Several studies have shown that copeptin is released very early during the onset of an acute myocardial infarction, raising the question of its potential value in the diagnosis of AMI and particularly in ruling-out AMI. Indeed, copeptin is released much earlier than troponin, given that copeptin is actively released from the hypothalamus, while troponin occurs in the bloodstream as a breakdown product from dying cardiomyocytes, making the interpretation of their complementary kinetics a useful tool to rule-out AMI. It has been shown that the combination of a negative result of troponin together with a negative result of copeptin can rule out AMI at emergency department presentation with a negative predictive value ranging from 95% to 100%. These results have been confirmed in a randomised controlled trial.
Cardiogenic shock
High concentrations of vasopressin during cardiogenic shock have been widely described. It has been shown that the kinetics of copeptin are similar to vasopressin in that context.
Heart failure
The prognostic value of vasopressin for prediction of outcome in patients suffering from heart failure has been known since the nineties. Patients presenting with high levels of vasopressin have a worsened outcome. Recently, a similar interest has been demonstrated for copeptin in heart failure.