Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.11613/BM.2016.025
Title: Recovery of spiked troponin I in four routine assays
Authors: Loh, T.P 
Lim, X.C
Kieu, K
Sajiir, H
Neo, S.F
Cheng, W.L
Sethi, S.K 
Keywords: troponin I
troponin I
Article
cardiovascular disease
centrifugation
clinical chemistry
hemolysis
human
limit of quantitation
major clinical study
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
spectrophotometry
bioassay
blood
procedures
sensitivity and specificity
standards
Biological Assay
Humans
Sensitivity and Specificity
Troponin I
Issue Date: 2016
Publisher: Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine
Citation: Loh, T.P, Lim, X.C, Kieu, K, Sajiir, H, Neo, S.F, Cheng, W.L, Sethi, S.K (2016). Recovery of spiked troponin I in four routine assays. Biochemia Medica 26 (2) : 233-239. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.11613/BM.2016.025
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Introduction: This study aimed to examine the recovery of spiked human cardiac troponin I (cTnI) results measured by four routine assays, and investigate possible interference from microclots. Materials and methods: 457 consecutive samples with cTnI concentration below limit of quantitation (12 ng/L), declared by the Vitros TnI ES assay (reference assay), were measured on Beckman Coulter Accu TnI+3, Siemens TnI-Ultra and Roche TnI STAT assays. These samples were enriched with native full-length cTnI to a concentration of 100 ng/L and retested. A post-spiking result that exceeded the critical difference at a predefined probability of 0.0005 of the target concentration (the median post-spiking result for each individual assay) was considered as outlier. To determine whether microclots were a significant cause of critically discrepant outlier results, a separate 50 samples were centrifuged twice between two postspiking measurements using the Vitros TnI ES assay. Results: The median recovery of the enriched cTnI was highest with the Roche assay (271 ng/L) and lowest with the Vitros assay (29 ng/L). The Vitros assay had the highest percentage of results that exceeded the critical difference (49%), followed by the Siemens (38%), Roche (18%) and Beckman Coulter (7%) assays. None of the 50 additional samples produced a critically lower cTnI result after re-centrifugation. Conclusions: Our findings underscored the variability of cTnI assays in measuring native cTnI. The lack of cTnI r sults that became significantly lower after re-centrifugation suggested that microclots are unlikely to be a major cause of the outlier results. © Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine.
Source Title: Biochemia Medica
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/183877
ISSN: 1330-0962
DOI: 10.11613/BM.2016.025
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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