BACKGROUND: Ferritin standardisation is problematical due to the heterogeneity of ferritin isoforms and the antibodies used in its immunoassay, and the lack of a reference measurement procedure. We investigated the performance of the 1st (liver), 2nd (spleen) and 3rd (recombinant) International Standards (ISs) for ferritin in major assays. METHODS: The ferritin in a serum pool 'spiked' with either the 2nd or 3rd IS for ferritin was measured by 52 laboratories using five automated methods and the recovery of the target values calculated. A smaller serum pool was 'spiked' with the 1st IS for a limited recovery exercise. The ferritin values of five serum samples were also measured and recalculated relative to the ISs. RESULTS: Recoveries of each of the 2nd and 3rd ISs were 90%-110% for four of five methods; recoveries of the 1st IS were 104% and 111% for two of three methods claiming traceability to this IS. One method significantly over-recovered each of the IS (124%-155%). Recalculating the ferritin values of the serum samples relative to the IS reduced the overall inter-method agreement, largely because of the anomalous over-recovery of the IS by one method. CONCLUSIONS: The use of the 3rd IS to standardise assays will minimise assay drift due to manufacturers adopting a 'harmonisation' approach in which the calibration is adjusted to conform to overall mean values. Standardisation against the current IS also ensures compliance with the European Union In-Vitro Diagnostic Directive which requires traceability of assay calibrators to reference materials of a higher order. Assay drift may result in poor sensitivity and specificity in the diagnosis of iron status, and would require laboratories to continually re-evaluate reference intervals.
BACKGROUND: Ferritin standardisation is problematical due to the heterogeneity of ferritin isoforms and the antibodies used in its immunoassay, and the lack of a reference measurement procedure. We investigated the performance of the 1st (liver), 2nd (spleen) and 3rd (recombinant) International Standards (ISs) for ferritin in major assays. METHODS: The ferritin in a serum pool 'spiked' with either the 2nd or 3rd IS for ferritin was measured by 52 laboratories using five automated methods and the recovery of the target values calculated. A smaller serum pool was 'spiked' with the 1st IS for a limited recovery exercise. The ferritin values of five serum samples were also measured and recalculated relative to the ISs. RESULTS: Recoveries of each of the 2nd and 3rd ISs were 90%-110% for four of five methods; recoveries of the 1st IS were 104% and 111% for two of three methods claiming traceability to this IS. One method significantly over-recovered each of the IS (124%-155%). Recalculating the ferritin values of the serum samples relative to the IS reduced the overall inter-method agreement, largely because of the anomalous over-recovery of the IS by one method. CONCLUSIONS: The use of the 3rd IS to standardise assays will minimise assay drift due to manufacturers adopting a 'harmonisation' approach in which the calibration is adjusted to conform to overall mean values. Standardisation against the current IS also ensures compliance with the European Union In-Vitro Diagnostic Directive which requires traceability of assay calibrators to reference materials of a higher order. Assay drift may result in poor sensitivity and specificity in the diagnosis of iron status, and would require laboratories to continually re-evaluate reference intervals.
Authors: Sean Lynch; Christine M Pfeiffer; Michael K Georgieff; Gary Brittenham; Susan Fairweather-Tait; Richard F Hurrell; Harry J McArdle; Daniel J Raiten Journal: J Nutr Date: 2018-06-01 Impact factor: 4.798
Authors: Gilmar Pereira Silva; Carlos Daniel De La Vega Elena; Fabiana Pirani Carneiro; Joel Paulo Russomano Veiga Journal: Int Arch Med Date: 2014-05-12
Authors: Maria N Garcia-Casal; Juan P Peña-Rosas; Eloisa Urrechaga; Jesus F Escanero; Junsheng Huo; Ricardo X Martinez; Lucero Lopez-Perez Journal: PLoS One Date: 2018-05-03 Impact factor: 3.240
Authors: Grzegorz Mariusz Sukiennicki; Wojciech Marciniak; Magdalena Muszyńska; Piotr Baszuk; Satish Gupta; Katarzyna Białkowska; Katarzyna Jaworska-Bieniek; Katarzyna Durda; Marcin Lener; Sandra Pietrzak; Tomasz Gromowski; Karolina Prajzendanc; Alicja Łukomska; Piotr Waloszczyk; Janusz Zenon Wójcik; Rodney Scott; Jan Lubiński; Anna Jakubowska Journal: PLoS One Date: 2019-01-14 Impact factor: 3.240