Journal
CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 55, Issue 11, Pages 1991-1994Publisher
AMER ASSOC CLINICAL CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1373/clinchem.2009.129833
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Funding
- NIH Clinical Center, Department of Health and Human Services
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BACKGROUND: Increased urinary albumin excretion is a well-documented diagnostic and prognostic biomarker for renal disease. Urinary albumin is typically measured in clinical settings by immunoassay methods. However, neither a reference method nor a urine albumin calibration reference material is currently available. METHODS: We quantified Urinary albumin in patient samples by using 3 commercially available reagent systems: DiaSorin SPQ (TM) and Beckman Coulter LX (R) 20 (immunoturbidimetric), and Siemens Immulite (R) (competitive immunoassay). Results were compared to values obtained by protein-cleavage liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). RESULTS: In general, results from the 3 immunoassays agreed with results from LC-MS/MS. However, the SPQ results showed a negative bias across all ranges of albuminuria [(0-200 mg/L, y = 0.91x - 3.74 (CI 0.86-0.96); > 200 mg/L, y = 0.88x- 40.30 (CI 0.76-1 00)], whereas the I,X 20 showed minimal bias in the 0-200 mg/L range [y = 0.97x - 88 (CI 0.92-1.02)] and the Immulite assay showed positive bias in the 0-200 mg/L range [y = 1.15x - 4.38 (CI 1.09-1.20)]. CONCLUSIONS: These results showed a reasonable quantification of urinary albumin by representative polyclonal and monoclonal immunoassays compared to an LC-MS/MS assay. In addition, the results do not suggest the presence of nonimmunoreactive albumin in urine. However, differences in analytic performance between assays support the need for a reference calibration material and reference method to standardize clinical laboratory measurements of urinary albumin. (C) 2009 American Association for Clinical Chemistry
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