Literature DB >> 30638139

Analytical quality assessment and method comparison of immunoassays for the measurement of serum cobalamin and folate in dogs and cats.

Susan A McLeish1,2, Kay Burt1,2, Kostas Papasouliotis1,2.   

Abstract

Serum cobalamin and folate are often measured in cats and dogs as part of laboratory testing for intestinal disease, small intestinal dysbiosis, or exocrine pancreatic deficiency. We performed an analytical validation of human immunoassays for cobalamin and folate measurement (AIA-900 analyzer, Tosoh Bioscience) and compared results with those obtained using chemiluminescence assays (Immulite 2000 analyzer, Siemens Medical Solutions Diagnostics). Accuracy, precision, total observable error (TEobs%), and σ values were calculated for the immunoassays. Correlation and agreement were evaluated with Deming regression, Passing-Bablok regression, and Bland-Altman analysis. Cobalamin intra-assay and inter-assay CVs were 1.8-9.3% and 2.6-6.8%, respectively. Folate intra-assay and inter-assay CVs were 1.5-9.1% and 3.4-8.1%, respectively. TEobs (%) were ≤19 and ≤31 for cobalamin and folate, respectively. Sigma values were 3.60-11.50 for cobalamin and 2.90-7.50 for folate. Regression analysis demonstrated very high or high correlations for cobalamin [ r = 0.98 (dogs), 0.97 (cats)] and folate [ r = 0.88 (dogs), 0.92 (cats)] but Bland-Altman analysis revealed poor agreement for both. The immunoassays had good analytical performance for measuring cobalamin and folate in both species. Results obtained by the 2 analyzers cannot be used interchangeably and should be interpreted using instrument-specific reference intervals. Further studies are required to establish immunoassay-specific reference intervals and to evaluate the diagnostic performance and clinical utility of the analyzer for these analytes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Assay validation; canine; cobalamin; feline; folic acid; vitamin B12; vitamin B9

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2019        PMID: 30638139      PMCID: PMC6838819          DOI: 10.1177/1040638718824073

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Vet Diagn Invest        ISSN: 1040-6387            Impact factor:   1.279


  46 in total

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5.  Validation of an automated chemiluminescent immunoassay for salivary cortisol measurements in pigs.

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7.  Metabolism of amino acids in cats with severe cobalamin deficiency.

Authors:  C G Ruaux; J M Steiner; D A Williams
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9.  Hyperhomocysteinemia in Greyhounds and its Association with Hypofolatemia and Other Clinicopathologic Variables.

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Journal:  J Vet Intern Med       Date:  2016-11-19       Impact factor: 3.333

Review 10.  Laboratory tests for diagnosis of gastrointestinal and pancreatic diseases.

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  2 in total

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Review 2.  Review of cobalamin status and disorders of cobalamin metabolism in dogs.

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