Analytical Concordance of Diverse Point-of-Care and Central Laboratory Troponin I Assays
Author(s) -
Albert K.Y. Tsui,
Martha E. Lyon,
Sean van Diepen,
Bobbi Lynn Goudreau,
Dylan Thomas,
Trefor Higgins,
Joshua E. Raizman,
Anna K. Füzéry,
Karina Rodríguez-Capote,
Mathew P. Estey,
George Cembrowski
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
the journal of applied laboratory medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2576-9456
pISSN - 2475-7241
DOI - 10.1373/jalm.2018.026690
Subject(s) - troponin i , concordance , medicine , troponin , triage , cardiology , myocardial infarction , emergency medicine
Background Cardiac troponin I (cTnI) 99th percentile cutoffs, used in the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction, are not standardized across cTnI assays. We compared 3 point-of-care (POC) and 1 central laboratory contemporary cTnI assays against the Abbott high-sensitivity (hs) cTnI to evaluate the analytical concordance and the feasibility of using a single cutoff value for all assays. Methods Fresh blood samples collected from 102 inpatients in the coronary care unit were measured on central laboratory instruments (Beckman Coulter DxI AccuTnI+3 TnI, Abbott Architect hs-TnI) and cTnI POC analyzers (Alere Triage Troponin I, Radiometer AQT90, Abbott i-STAT). Agreement and correlation between the contemporary cTnI assays and hs-cTnI assay were assessed using regression analysis. Proportional bias was assessed using Bland–Altman plots. Concordance between the contemporary cTnI and hs-cTnI assays was determined by diagnostic contingency tables at specific cutoffs. Results Most POC cTnI assays had excellent correlation with the Abbott hs-cTnI method (r 2 = 0.955–0.970) except for Alere Triage (r 2 = 0.617), while proportional bias is evident between all cTnI assays. Overall concordance between POC contemporary cTnI assays and hs-cTnI assay was 80% to 90% at their respective 99th percentile cutoffs. The concordance increased to 90% to 95% when a fixed cutoff of 0.03 to 0.05 ng/mL was used across the assays. Conclusions This study demonstrates poor analytical concordance between cTnI assays at the 99th percentile and supports the notion of a single clinical decision limit for cTnI and consequently standardization of diagnostic protocols despite the analytical differences among these assays.
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