Sterols, Plasma
Performed by: LabCorp
Sterols, Plasma (GC/MS) Panel
The Sterols, Plasma panel is a specialized blood test that measures cholesterol-related sterols and plant sterols to help evaluate how your body absorbs cholesterol, produces cholesterol, and processes related sterol compounds. This test is commonly used when a standard lipid panel (like LDL-C, HDL-C, and triglycerides) doesn’t fully explain cardiovascular risk, treatment response, or suspected inherited sterol disorders.
Unlike routine cholesterol testing, this panel provides deeper insight into cholesterol metabolism, including markers of cholesterol synthesis, intestinal absorption, and plant sterol exposure. Results may help clinicians personalize strategies such as dietary changes, cholesterol-lowering medications, and evaluation for rare metabolic conditions.
What this panel measures
This panel typically includes multiple sterols that fall into key metabolic categories:
Cholesterol absorption markers
These sterols can reflect how much cholesterol your body absorbs from the gut. Higher levels may suggest increased absorption and may influence treatment decisions.
Common absorption-related markers include:
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Campesterol
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Sitosterol
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Stigmasterol
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Cholestanol
Cholesterol synthesis markers
These sterols help estimate how much cholesterol your body is making internally (endogenous production). Elevated synthesis markers may be seen in people with increased hepatic cholesterol production.
Common synthesis-related markers include:
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Lathosterol
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Desmosterol
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Squalene
Specialized sterol intermediates
Some sterols are included to screen for specific metabolic patterns and rare genetic conditions affecting cholesterol pathways.
Examples include:
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7-Dehydrocholesterol
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8-Dehydrocholesterol
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8(9)-Cholestenol
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DiHydro T-MAS
Why this panel matters
Cholesterol metabolism is not the same for everyone. Two people can have the same LDL-C but very different underlying biology, such as:
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One person primarily absorbs cholesterol efficiently
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Another person primarily produces more cholesterol internally
The Sterols, Plasma panel helps clarify these differences, which may support more targeted decisions around:
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Dietary approaches (fat type, fiber, plant sterol intake)
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Medication selection (absorption-blocking vs synthesis-blocking strategies)
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Investigating unexplained lipid abnormalities
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Evaluating rare sterol disorders when clinical suspicion is high
How to interpret results (high vs low)
Sterol patterns are often more meaningful than any single value.
If absorption markers are elevated
This may suggest increased intestinal sterol absorption. Clinicians may consider dietary adjustments or therapies that reduce absorption depending on the full lipid profile and risk factors.
If synthesis markers are elevated
This may suggest increased cholesterol production. Some people with this pattern respond well to interventions that target cholesterol synthesis.
If plant sterols are significantly elevated
Markedly elevated plant sterols can raise suspicion for rare inherited conditions (such as disorders of sterol transport), especially when paired with premature cardiovascular disease or unusual lipid findings.
If sterols are normal
A normal sterol profile generally suggests cholesterol absorption and synthesis markers are within expected ranges, making major sterol metabolism disorders less likely.
Who may benefit from this test
The Sterols, Plasma panel may be helpful if you:
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Have high LDL-C despite a healthy lifestyle
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Have a strong family history of high cholesterol or early heart disease
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Are not responding as expected to cholesterol therapy
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Need deeper insight into cholesterol absorption vs production
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Have suspected rare sterol metabolism conditions
Sample type and methodology
This test is typically performed on a blood (plasma) sample and commonly analyzed using GC/MS (Gas Chromatography–Mass Spectrometry), a highly sensitive method for measuring sterol compounds at low concentrations.
Next steps after testing
Because sterol testing is more advanced than routine lipid testing, results are best interpreted alongside:
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LDL-C, ApoB, non-HDL-C
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Triglycerides and HDL-C
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Family history and cardiovascular risk
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Diet, medications, and supplements
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Thyroid and metabolic health markers (when relevant)
Related tests and categories
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Lipid Panel
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ApoB (Apolipoprotein B)
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LDL Particle Number (LDL-P)
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Lp(a) Lipoprotein(a)
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Cardiometabolic Risk Markers
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Genetic Lipid Disorders (advanced evaluation)
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