CEDIA (R) sirolimus assay compared with HPLC-MS/MS and HPLC-UV in transplant recipient specimens


Autoria(s): Westley, IS; Morris, RG; Taylor, PJ; Salm, P; James, MJ
Contribuinte(s)

S. J. Soldin

F. Sjoeqvist

Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

The role of the therapeutic drug monitoring laboratory in support of immunosuppressant drug therapy is well established, and the introduction of sirolimus (SRL) is a new direction in this field. The lack of an immunoassay for several years has restricted the availability of SRL assay services. The recent availability of a CEDIA (R) SRL assay has the potential to improve this situation. The present communication has compared the CEDIA (R) SRL method with 2 established chromatographic methods, HPLC-UV and HPLC-MS/MS. The CEDIA (R) method, run on a Hitachi 917 analyzer, showed acceptable validation criteria with within-assay precision of 9.1% and 3.3%, and bias of 17.1% and 5.8%, at SRL concentrations of 5.0 mu g/L and 20 mu g/L, respectively. The corresponding between-run precision values were 11.5% and 3.3% and bias of 7.1% and 2.9% at 5.0 mu g/L and 20 mu g/L, respectively, The lower limit of quantification was found to be 3.0 mu g/L. A series of 96 EDTA whole-blood samples predominantly from renal transplant recipients were assayed by the 3 methods for comparison. It was found that the CEDIA (R) method showed a Deming regression line of CEDIA = 1.20 X HPLC-MS/MS - 0.07 (r = 0.934, SEE = 1.47), with a mean bias of 20.4%. Serial blood samples from 8 patients included in this evaluation showed that the CEDIA (R) method reflected the clinical fluctuations in the chromatographic methods, albeit with the variable bias noted. The CEDIA (R) method on the H917 analyzer is therefore a useful adjunct to SRL dosage individualization in renal transplant recipients.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75085

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

Palavras-Chave #Medical Laboratory Technology #Pharmacology & Pharmacy #Toxicology #Sirolimus #Therapeutic Drug Monitoring #Immunosuppressant Drug #Performance Liquid-chromatography #Whole-blood Concentrations #Tandem Mass-spectrometry #Ultraviolet Detection #Radioreceptor Assay #Consensus Panel #Cyclosporine #Rapamycin #Immunoassays #Quantification #C1 #320503 Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics #730305 Diagnostic methods
Tipo

Journal Article