BACKGROUND: Human growth hormone (hGH) is measured for the diagnosis of secretion disorders. These measurements fall under the EU Directive 98/79/EC on in vitro diagnostic medical devices requiring traceability of commercial calibrator values to higher-order reference materials or procedures (Off J Eur Communities 1998 Dec 7; L 331:1-37). External quality assessment schemes show large discrepancies between results from different methods, even though most methods provide results traceable to the recommended International Standard (IS 98/574). The aim of this study was to investigate possible causes for these discrepancies. METHODS: We investigated the commutability and recovery of hGH in reconstituted IS 98/574. We tested different reconstitution protocols and used 4 different serum matrices for spiking. These IS preparations were measured together with serum samples. We quantified hGH by 5 different methods in 4 different laboratories. RESULTS: Results from the different methods correlated well for the serum samples. Mean discrepancies between results from different methods were <= 20%. None of the IS preparations was commutable for all the method comparisons. The recovery of hGH in preparations of IS 98/574 depended on the reconstitution protocol (>10-fold differences) and background matrix (relative differences <= 17% for different serum matrices). CONCLUSIONS: The use of different protocols for reconstitution and spiking of hGH reference preparations affects quantification by immunoassays, potentially leading to a bias between commercial methods, despite the use of calibrators with values claimed to be traceable to the same higher-order reference material.

Gaps in the traceability chain of human growth hormone measurements / S. Boulo, K. Hanisch, M. Bidlingmaier, C.G. Arsene, M. Panteghini,G. Auclair, C. Sturgeon, H. Schimmel, I. Zegers. - In: CLINICAL CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0009-9147. - 59:7(2013 Jul), pp. 1074-1082. [10.1373/clinchem.2012.199489]

Gaps in the traceability chain of human growth hormone measurements

M. Panteghini;
2013

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Human growth hormone (hGH) is measured for the diagnosis of secretion disorders. These measurements fall under the EU Directive 98/79/EC on in vitro diagnostic medical devices requiring traceability of commercial calibrator values to higher-order reference materials or procedures (Off J Eur Communities 1998 Dec 7; L 331:1-37). External quality assessment schemes show large discrepancies between results from different methods, even though most methods provide results traceable to the recommended International Standard (IS 98/574). The aim of this study was to investigate possible causes for these discrepancies. METHODS: We investigated the commutability and recovery of hGH in reconstituted IS 98/574. We tested different reconstitution protocols and used 4 different serum matrices for spiking. These IS preparations were measured together with serum samples. We quantified hGH by 5 different methods in 4 different laboratories. RESULTS: Results from the different methods correlated well for the serum samples. Mean discrepancies between results from different methods were <= 20%. None of the IS preparations was commutable for all the method comparisons. The recovery of hGH in preparations of IS 98/574 depended on the reconstitution protocol (>10-fold differences) and background matrix (relative differences <= 17% for different serum matrices). CONCLUSIONS: The use of different protocols for reconstitution and spiking of hGH reference preparations affects quantification by immunoassays, potentially leading to a bias between commercial methods, despite the use of calibrators with values claimed to be traceable to the same higher-order reference material.
CONSENSUS STATEMENT ; LABORATORY MEASUREMENT ; RESEARCH SOCIETY ; FACTOR ASSAYS ; STANDARDIZATION ; GH ; QUANTIFICATION ; HARMONIZATION ; INTERFERENCE ; SOMATROPIN
Settore BIO/12 - Biochimica Clinica e Biologia Molecolare Clinica
lug-2013
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/224333
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