| Literature DB >> 15808587 |
D W Holt1, M Moreton, K Laamanen, A Johnston.
Abstract
Measurement of sirolimus as a guide to therapy is widely accepted. Since the commercial introduction of the drug, the only method available to measure blood concentrations has been high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Only a limited number of centers have the facilities to perform this technique and, as a result, the measurement of the drug has been performed in central laboratories, often some distance from the clinical centers. This article describes a single-center assessment of a new immunoassay to measure sirolimus, including a comparison between immunoassay results and a chromatographic technique. Calibration accuracy was good, reproducibility at 11 ng/mL was better than 6%, and sensitivity was better than 2 ng/mL; all these parameters are appropriate for routine clinical use. There was a mean positive bias of almost 20% for the measurement of sirolimus in clinical samples from kidney transplant patients receiving the drug, compared with HPLC. This bias was most likely due to cross-reactivity with metabolites of the drug and was of the order noted when an earlier configuration of this immunoassay was used in clinical practice. We conclude that, despite the analytical bias, this immunoassay offers a viable alternative to the use of HPLC and would be an assay suitable for implementing at local centers.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15808587 DOI: 10.1016/j.transproceed.2004.12.207
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transplant Proc ISSN: 0041-1345 Impact factor: 1.066