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Analytical Performances of an Enzymatic Assay for the Measurement of Glycated Albumin
Author(s) -
Roberto Testa,
Elena Guerra,
Anna Rita Bonfigli,
Nicola Di Gaetano,
Gabriele Santini,
Ferruccio Ceriotti
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the journal of applied laboratory medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2576-9456
pISSN - 2475-7241
DOI - 10.1373/jalm.2016.020446
Subject(s) - chemistry , repeatability , chromatography , detection limit , albumin , accuracy and precision , glucose oxidase , analytical chemistry (journal) , enzyme , biochemistry , mathematics , statistics
BACKGROUNDShort to intermediate integrated glycemic control is best determined by glycated albumin (GA). This assay is appropriate when interpretation of glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) is critical because of hemoglobinopathies, severe anemias, or other factors that affect red blood lifespan as hemodialysis. We evaluated a new assay based on the enzymatic quantification of GA by ketoamine oxidase and an albumin-specific protease.METHODSLimits of blank, detection, and quantification; precision; linearity; accuracy; interferences; correlation with HbA1c; and serum vs plasma study have been evaluated on ILab® systems.RESULTSLimit of blank, detection, and quantification for GA (g/L) were, respectively, 0.26, 0.36, and 1.15. Repeatability and within-device precision CVs were lower than 2.11%, 1.61%, and 1.56% for GA (g/L), albumin (g/L), and GA%, respectively. Linearity for GA (g/L) and GA% was 1.2-36.8 and 5.5-92.2, respectively. Highest deviation from linearity was <11% and recovery was higher than 90%. Accuracy against the certified ReCCS Japan Clinical Chemistry Reference Material (JCCRM) 611 was <1%. Classical interfering substances had no significant impact. Correlation of GA% between ILab® Taurus and ADVIA system was y = 1.02[GA%]+0.25; R2 = 0.994. No difference was found in the determination of GA% in serum vs plasma.CONCLUSIONSGA enzymatic assay is a reliable, fully automated method allowing accurate and precise determination of GA in a routine laboratory.

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