4.5 Article

Simultaneous determination of free and total prostate-specific antigen by a magnetic particle-based time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL LABORATORY ANALYSIS
Volume 31, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcla.22137

Keywords

free and total prostate-specific antigen; magnetic nanoparticles; simultaneous detection; time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay

Funding

  1. Technology Research Program of Wuxi City [2014CSB11N1305]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

ObjectivesIn this paper, a novel, sensitive and rapid method to simultaneously determine the free and total prostate-specific antigen (fPSA and tPSA) in serum by combining a time-resolved fluoroimmunoassay (TRFIA) and immunomagnetic separation was described. MethodsThe new approach uses magnetic particles as an immobilization matrix and means of separation, whereas the luminescent europium (Eu) and samarium (Sm) chelates are used as probes. The proposed method was evaluated via a single-step, sandwich-type TRFIA immunoassay of tPSA and fPSA as model analytes in serum. ResultsA new one-step method to simultaneously detect fPSA and tPSA in less than 15minutes was built up with the detection limits 0.006ng/mL for fPSA and 0.05ng/mL for tPSA. The assay ranges for fPSA and tPSA were both 0.5-100ng/mL, whereas the average recovery of those two obtained by our original mode were 95.9% and 95.3%, respectively. The present new TRFIA method carrying larger reproducibility, higher recovery, and sensitive specificity was demonstrated to be widely acceptable. ConclusionsThis simultaneous determination method containing a fast and sensitive approach can be put into an important position to screening large quantities of specimen, and be commonly applied to the clinical determination of fPSA and tPSA in human serum.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available