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Determination of potential biotin interference on accuracy of results of serologic assays for various viral hepatitis markers
Author(s) -
Kodani Maja,
Poe Amanda,
Drobeniuc Jan,
MixsonHayden Tonya
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of medical virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1096-9071
pISSN - 0146-6615
DOI - 10.1002/jmv.25880
Subject(s) - biotin , serology , virology , streptavidin , antibody , immunology , medicine , biology , biochemistry
Biotin taken orally can interfere with some diagnostic immunoassays, including those for thyroid hormones, ferritin, and markers of infectious disease. Assays affected are ones that use streptavidin‐biotin in their design. The goal of our study was to examine the effect of biotin concentrations of up to 1200 ng/mL on three serological assays performed on VITROS 3600 system, Immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies to hepatitis A virus (anti‐HAV), total anti‐HAV, and IgM antibodies to hepatitis B virus core antigen (anti‐HBc), by spiking serum samples with variable amounts of biotin. No false‐negative results were generated with either concentration of biotin for total anti‐HAV (65/65). Likewise, biotin caused no false‐positive IgM anti‐HAV results (59/59) with either concentration of biotin; however, 6.7% false negativity was found for IgM anti‐HAV when samples were spiked with 1200 ng/mL of biotin. Conversely, 100% false positivity (30/30) was produced by biotin interference in total anti‐HAV negative specimens with both concentrations of biotin. False negativity rate was 87.5% in IgM anti‐HBc positive samples when biotin levels were at 1200 ng/mL. These data show that individuals taking biotin‐containing supplements may test false‐positive in some serologic assays using streptavidin‐biotin chemistries. Further studies are warranted to determine the extent of biotin interference resulting in false‐positive and negative results and their impact, if any, on surveillance and diagnostic settings.