Whew, that was a lot of work!
The first reference was dated 2016, but a lot of really old thinking. By that time radiation therapy was common, hypophysectomy was starting and cabergoline trials were also underway in 2016. Yet this article called acromegaly a rare condition with no treatments. Just read this paper, and nothing in there says that in the study of 5 cats there was no case of false positive. Rather, a false negative that became positive over time.
The next paper is even older, published in 2000. IGF-1 measurement were done using a human assay for IGF-1. 8 cats were studied and IGF-1 results compared to human and rat IGF-1. It's a rather technical paper but ends with "Further carefully controlled studies are required to address these issues." One of those issues is the lack of correlation between IGF-1 and growth hormone, which is the first paper identified as a problem because growth hormone amounts fluctuate throughout the day.
The third reference, from 2004 studied a good number of cats. It did have one flaw, it used physical features to screen for acromegaly, which 65% do not have on diagnosis. However, it did conclude "Our findings suggest that such caution is most warranted when a diagnosis of acromegaly is sought based on IGF-I levels in long-term insulin treated diabetic cats", where long term insulin treated cats was over 14 months. Apparently long term insulin treated diabetic cats can have higher levels of IGF-1. Copernicus is not a long term diabetic.
A more recent and relevant note is that the way IGF-1 is measured has been changed from a radioimmunoassay (the above 3 references) to a chemical one, as of 2023.
MSU reference range changed for IGF-1 (and paper). The results from MSU reflect these change. A quote from the paper in the post I linked is "Therefore, measurement of IGF-1 has become a standard screening test for HS in cats [
1,
2,
7]." The paper studied results from 50 cats.
So my summary to me, testing IGF-1 too early can show false negatives. Testing after a year-ish, can lead to some false positives.