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Initial analytic quality assessment and method comparison of an immunoassay for adrenocorticotropic hormone measurement in equine samples
Author(s) -
Irvine Katherine L.,
Burt Kay,
Hill Andrew J.,
Shaw Stephanie,
Papasouliotis Kostas
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
veterinary clinical pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.537
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1939-165X
pISSN - 0275-6382
DOI - 10.1111/vcp.12326
Subject(s) - adrenocorticotropic hormone , immunoassay , medicine , biology , immunology , hormone , antibody
Background Equine pituitary pars intermedia dysfunction ( PPID ) may be diagnosed by measuring baseline plasma adrenocorticotrophic hormone ( ACTH ). The Immulite 1000 analyzer uses an automated chemiluminescence enzyme assay, previously validated for measuring equine ACTH . Recently, an automated bench‐top immunoassay analyzer ( AIA ‐360), designed for analytes in people, became available for veterinary use. Objectives Objectives were to evaluate analytic performance of the AIA immunoassay for measuring equine ACTH , and compare the results with those obtained by the Immulite. Methods Adrenocorticotrophic hormone was measured in plasma samples from 52 clinical cases. For the AIA , within‐ and between‐run coefficients of variation ( CV ) were assessed, linearity and recovery studies performed, and observed total error ( TE obs ) calculated. Correlation and agreement between the 2 analyzers were also evaluated. Results Within‐run and between‐run CV of the AIA ranged from 2.3% to 4% and 3.5% to 8%, respectively. ACTH recoveries ranged from 89.5% to 115.9%. TE obs at 26.5 pg/mL ACTH was 4.1 pg/mL. The ACTH results (median: 25.9 pg/mL; range: 4.3–276.7 pg/mL) with AIA were significantly lower ( P < .0001) than with the Immulite (median: 29.9 pg/mL; range: 10.3–639.0 pg/mL). Correlation between the 2 analyzers was r = 0.882 ( P < .0001), with a significant bias for the AIA of −16 pg/mL. The 2 methods were not identical within inherent imprecision. Conclusion The AIA is precise for measuring ACTH in horses. Although correlation between the instruments is good, the values obtained by the immunoassays cannot be used interchangeably and should be interpreted using reference intervals established for each analyzer to avoid false negatives. Diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of the AIA ‐360 should be evaluated before clinical use.

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