Literature DB >> 28050368

Comparing Assay Performance of ELISA and Chemiluminescence Immunoassay in Detecting Antibodies to Hepatitis B Surface Antigen.

Mridula Madiyal1, Siddharth Sagar2, Shashidhar Vishwanath3, Barnini Banerjee1, Vandana Kalwaje Eshwara4, Kiran Chawla5.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Antibodies to Hepatitis B surface Antigen (Anti-HBs) levels are measured as markers for immune response to vaccination and in decision making for post-exposure prophylaxis against Hepatitis-B. Several immunoassay formats are used to measure Anti-HBs, thus carrying the possibility of variation in measured levels between different assays. This study compares the performance of Chemiluminescence Immunoassay (CLIA) against Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) in measuring Anti-HBs titer by looking into concordance between the two test reports. AIM: To compare the agreement between ELISA and CLIA in measurement of Anti-HBs antibody titers.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: This prospective comparative study conducted at Kasturba Medical College, Manipal measured consecutive serum samples (69) sent for anti-HBs levels during May-June 2016 using both CLIA (Abbott Architect) and ELISA (Bio-Rad). Anti-HBs values of ≤10mIU/ml was considered as non-protective and >10mIU/ml as protective. The agreement between the tests in classifying the antibody titers as non-protective or protective was computed using Kappa coefficient, and the difference in individual titer values between the tests compared using Bland-Altman plot on SPSS (v.15).
RESULTS: Out of the 69 samples analysed, 18 samples (26.1%) were of health-care personnel and remaining of patients. Agreement between ELISA and CLIA in identifying the antibody titers as protective and non-protective were 96.5% and 90.9% respectively, resulting in an agreement of 0.84. The coefficient-of-variation of ELISA and CLIA were 74.5% and 113.1%, respectively. Three value based discordant results were noted; two samples deemed protective by ELISA were reported as non-protective by CLIA. One non-protective titer by ELISA was reported as protective by CLIA.
CONCLUSION: Analytical agreement is good between the two immunoassays. However there are some discrepancies in quantitative measurement. This may have been due the variation in the standard calibrators used in each assay. Though CLIA showed more variation in the values, it has the advantage of being automated test with low turn around time. Therefore, both the test methodologies can be reliably used in place of each other for detection of Anti- HBs titer.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Anti HBs titer; Bland-altman graph; Non-protective titer; Protective titer; Quantitative immunoassay

Year:  2016        PMID: 28050368      PMCID: PMC5198321          DOI: 10.7860/JCDR/2016/24108.8921

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Diagn Res        ISSN: 0973-709X


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1.  Anti-HBs levels after hepatitis B immunisation depend on test reagents: routinely determined 10 and 100 IU/l seroprotection levels unreliable.

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Journal:  Vaccine       Date:  2002-07-26       Impact factor: 3.641

2.  Comparison of nine commercially available assays for quantification of antibody response to hepatitis B virus surface antigen.

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9.  [Comparative Study for Anti-Hepatitis B Surface Antigen Titers Based on Two Measurement Methods: Using Monoclonal Antibodies Isolated from Hepatitis B Vaccinated Recipients].

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