BACKGROUND: Measurement of serum thyroglobulin (Tg) is used to monitor patients after treatment for differentiated thyroid carcinoma (TC). Difficulty in using Tg as a biomarker of the recurrence of TC in many patients stems from the presence of endogenous anti-Tg autoantibodies (Tg-AAbs), which can interfere with immunoassays (IAs) and cause false-negative results. METHODS: We enriched Tg from serum samples using rabbit polyclonal anti-Tg antiserum and protein precipitation. Unrelated proteins were partially depleted in the process. Enriched proteins were then denatured, reduced, and digested with trypsin after the addition of a winged internal standard peptide. A Tg-specific tryptic peptide was purified by immunoaffinity extraction and analyzed by 2-dimensional LC-MS/MS. Instrument cycle time was 6.5 min per sample. RESULTS: The lower limit of quantification was 0.5 ng/mL (0.76 fmol/mL dimer). Total imprecision of triplicate measurements in serum samples over 5 days was <10%. Comparison with a commercial IA using serum samples free of Tg-AAb (n = 73) showed Deming regression, IA = 1.00 * LC-MS/MS - 2.35, r = 0.982, standard error of the estimate (S(y|x)) = 9.52. In a set of Tg-AAb-positive samples that tested negative for Tg using IA (n = 71), concentrations determined by LC-MS/MS were ≥0.5 ng/mL in 23% of samples (median 1.2, range 0.7-11 ng/mL). CONCLUSIONS: The introduced method has acceptable performance characteristics for use in clinical diagnostic applications. The most substantial disagreement between methods was observed in Tg-AAb-positive samples with concentrations <2 ng/mL (determined with LC-MS/MS). The affinity-assisted enrichment strategy used for Tg in this method should be applicable to other biomarkers that have endogenous autoantibodies.
BACKGROUND: Measurement of serum thyroglobulin (Tg) is used to monitor patients after treatment for differentiated thyroid carcinoma (TC). Difficulty in using Tg as a biomarker of the recurrence of TC in many patients stems from the presence of endogenous anti-Tg autoantibodies (Tg-AAbs), which can interfere with immunoassays (IAs) and cause false-negative results. METHODS: We enriched Tg from serum samples using rabbit polyclonal anti-Tg antiserum and protein precipitation. Unrelated proteins were partially depleted in the process. Enriched proteins were then denatured, reduced, and digested with trypsin after the addition of a winged internal standard peptide. A Tg-specific tryptic peptide was purified by immunoaffinity extraction and analyzed by 2-dimensional LC-MS/MS. Instrument cycle time was 6.5 min per sample. RESULTS: The lower limit of quantification was 0.5 ng/mL (0.76 fmol/mL dimer). Total imprecision of triplicate measurements in serum samples over 5 days was <10%. Comparison with a commercial IA using serum samples free of Tg-AAb (n = 73) showed Deming regression, IA = 1.00 * LC-MS/MS - 2.35, r = 0.982, standard error of the estimate (S(y|x)) = 9.52. In a set of Tg-AAb-positive samples that tested negative for Tg using IA (n = 71), concentrations determined by LC-MS/MS were ≥0.5 ng/mL in 23% of samples (median 1.2, range 0.7-11 ng/mL). CONCLUSIONS: The introduced method has acceptable performance characteristics for use in clinical diagnostic applications. The most substantial disagreement between methods was observed in Tg-AAb-positive samples with concentrations <2 ng/mL (determined with LC-MS/MS). The affinity-assisted enrichment strategy used for Tg in this method should be applicable to other biomarkers that have endogenous autoantibodies.
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