Calcitonin is a hormone produced by specialized cells in the thyroid gland called C cells (also known as parafollicular cells). Its primary role in the body is to help regulate blood calcium levels — when calcium levels rise too high, calcitonin lowers them by slowing bone breakdown and reducing the release of calcium into the bloodstream. In pathology, calcitonin is important as a diagnostic marker: because C cells normally produce calcitonin, tumors that arise from C cells — particularly medullary thyroid carcinoma — continue to produce this hormone, and detecting calcitonin in tissue or measuring it in the blood is a key part of diagnosing and monitoring this cancer.
Calcitonin testing in pathology serves two main purposes:
Pathologists detect calcitonin in tissue using a technique called immunohistochemistry (IHC). An antibody designed to bind specifically to the calcitonin protein is applied to a thin slice of thyroid or tumor tissue on a glass slide. Where calcitonin is present, the antibody triggers a color change — typically brown — visible under the microscope. The staining appears in the cytoplasm of C cells.
Normal C cells are scattered throughout the thyroid in small numbers and stain positively for calcitonin. In medullary thyroid carcinoma, many more cells stain positively, often intensely and across large areas of the tissue sample.
Calcitonin IHC results are reported as either positive or negative:
Yes. In addition to its use as a tissue marker, calcitonin is one of the few hormones used as a blood-based tumor marker. Because MTC cells produce and secrete calcitonin into the bloodstream, measuring calcitonin levels in a blood sample can:
Approximately 25% of medullary thyroid carcinomas are hereditary, caused by an inherited mutation in the RET gene. These hereditary forms are associated with a condition called multiple endocrine neoplasia type 2 (MEN2), in which affected individuals are at risk of developing MTC, certain adrenal tumors (pheochromocytoma), and other endocrine conditions. Because calcitonin is the hallmark marker of MTC, calcitonin testing — both in tissue and in blood — plays a central role in the screening and surveillance of individuals and families known to carry a RET mutation.
For more information about MTC and its hereditary forms, see the medullary thyroid carcinoma diagnosis guide.