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Bleomycin-detectable Iron Assay for Non-Transferrin-bound Iron in Hematologic Malignancies
Author(s) -
Leni von Bonsdorff,
Enni Lindeberg,
Leila Sahlstedt,
J. Lehto,
Jaakko Parkkinen
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
clinical chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.705
H-Index - 218
eISSN - 1530-8561
pISSN - 0009-9147
DOI - 10.1093/clinchem/48.2.307
Subject(s) - transferrin , bleomycin , chemistry , transferrin saturation , chelation , hemolysis , detection limit , chromatography , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry , medicine , ferritin , immunology , chemotherapy , biology , inorganic chemistry , serum ferritin
BACKGROUNDA microwell modification of the bleomycin assay for determining non-transferrin-bound iron (NTBI) was evaluated and compared with a chelation method.METHODSThe bleomycin assay reagent and sample volumes were halved, and measurements were done in microwell plates. Samples from patients treated for hematologic malignancies were studied. The chelation method was based on mobilization of NTBI with a chelator and measurement of the ultrafiltered iron-chelator complex. NTBI results were also compared with transferrin saturation and the distribution of transferrin iron forms by urea-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis.RESULTSThe bleomycin assay intraassay imprecision (CV) was 7.7% and 8.2% and the interassay imprecision was 18% and 9.8% for a low (0.2 micromol/L) and a high (1.5 micromol/L) contrtrol, respectively. Hemolysis increased measured NTBI. A detection limit of 0.1 micromol/L was established based on the interference of nonvisible hemolysis and on accuracy studies. In patient samples, NTBI exceeded the detection limits only when transferrin saturation was >80%. Compared with the chelation method, the bleomycin assay gave clearly lower NTBI concentrations. The chelation method also gave positive results at <80% transferrin saturation. The recovery of iron added as ferric nitrilotriacetate to serum was 33% by the bleomycin assay and 64% by the chelation assay.CONCLUSIONSThe microwell version of the bleomycin assay is reproducible. When hemolyzed samples were excluded, bleomycin-detectable iron was found only when the transferrin saturation was >80%, suggesting high specificity. Bleomycin-detectable iron constitutes only a portion of the NTBI measured by the chelation method.

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