The United States Food and Drug Administration recently issued a safety communication to warn
for biotin interference in cardiac troponin assays. Cardiac troponins are the gold standard biomarkers for diagnosing
acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Cardiac troponin concentrations can be falsely low in
patients using dietary supplements containing high levels of biotin. Since the prevalence of dietary supplement intake is
≥30% in the USA and Europe, substantial clinical concern has risen that AMI might be
missed., Analytical interference of biotin
especially applies to cardiac troponin immunoassays exploiting the biotin–streptavidin
interaction in the assay configuration. Therefore, we evaluated the real-world prevalence of biotin
interference in high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT, Roche Diagnostics, Basel,
Switzerland) testing in acute cardiac care.This analysis included 572 consecutive patients of our acute cardiac care unit over a 3 month
period and was carried out according to the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. This
biotin interference analysis was conducted anonymously as part of an assay verification
protocol by our clinical laboratory. Hence, no additional patient informed consent was
acquired. For a representative characterization of the study population, we refer to the
CARMENTA trial (NCT01559467), which was carried out in the same acute cardiac care unit. Lithium-heparin plasma samples were
collected for routine hs-cTnT concentration assessment. The hs-cTnT assay has a limit of blank
of 3 ng/L, a limit of detection of 5 ng/L, a limit of quantitation of 13 ng/L, and a linear
measuring range of 5–10 000 ng/L. To directly assess the effect of biotin-driven hs-cTnT assay
interference, hs-cTnT concentrations were assessed before and after biotin depletion using an
excessive amount of streptavidin-coated magnetic micro-particles. To validate our biotin
depletion protocol, biotin concentrations (IDK® Biotin ELISA, Immundiagnostik AG,
Bensheim, Germany) were assessed in a sub-cohort of 100 patients before and after biotin
depletion. Considering the applied sample dilution factor (1:2), the biotin ELISA has a limit
of blank of 50 ng/L, a limit of detection of 64.8 ng/L, limit of quantitation of 96.2 ng/L,
and a linear measuring range of 96.2–2200 ng/L.Median [inter-quartile range] baseline biotin concentration in the 100 patients sub-cohort
was 331 [219-521] ng/L. Our biotin depletion protocol effectively removed almost all free
circulating plasma biotin, reducing levels to below the detection limit (96.2 ng/L) in 97% of
the samples. In the total population, no detectable biotin-associated bias was observed as
absolute hs-cTnT concentration differences (before minus after biotin depletion) were equally
distributed around zero (Figure ). A Wilcoxon signed-rank test supported unchanged hs-cTnT values after
biotin depletion (11.8 [5.6–24.2] ng/L vs. 11.8 [5.6–24.1] ng/L, P = 0.95).Bland–Altman plot of absolute hs-cTnT concentration differences before and after biotin
depletion in 572 patients. The open dots are individual data points. The black line
represents the median difference (0.00, 95% CI: −0.02 to 0.00) and the grey line is the
reference line.This study is the first to evaluate the real-world prevalence of biotin interference in the
hs-cTnT immunoassay in acute cardiac care.No patient within the sub-cohort showed biotin levels in the range where assay interference
would be suspected, suggesting a very low a priori probability of biotin-driven assay
interference in this patient group. In our total acute cardiac care unit population, no single
case of biotin interference was found as no relevant change in hs-cTnT concentration after
biotin depletion was observed in any patient.Although biotin’s potency at high levels to interfere with various immunoassays is undisputed
from an analytical perspective, the present analysis shows that biotin interference is in fact
rare. In terms of absolute risk, the probability of a missed AMI diagnosis due to biotin
interference is lower than other relatively common sources of risks such as blood sample
haemolysis, heterophilic antibodies, patient/blood sample misidentification, or even
biological variation of cardiac troponin T.Three limitations of our study merit attention. First, dietary supplement intake information
was not collected. However, considering the number of patients included in this analysis and,
a dietary supplement intake prevalence of ≥30% in The Netherlands, a substantial population
prone for biotin interference in hs-cTnT testing was studied. Second, specific patient groups
may receive extremely high-dosages of biotin, e.g. patients with multiple sclerosis and other
inflammatory diseases. Even though
the risk of a missed AMI diagnosis at a population level may be low, the risk in these
specific patient groups is conceivable. Third, we evaluated the effect of biotin interference
on the Roche assay only, and therefore, we cannot extrapolate these results to assays from
other manufacturers employing the biotin–streptavidin detection system. Further research is
needed to ensure that the impact of biotin interference is similarly negligible for these
assays. In light of these limitations, the recent hs-cTnT immunoassay adjustments to abolish
the risk of biotin interference is an important improvement to further minimize risk and
maximize the diagnostic accuracy of this pivotal AMI biomarker.Conflict of interest: none declared.
Authors: Martijn W Smulders; Bastiaan L J H Kietselaer; Marco Das; Joachim E Wildberger; Harry J G M Crijns; Leo F Veenstra; Hans-Peter Brunner-La Rocca; Marja P van Dieijen-Visser; Alma M A Mingels; Pieter C Dagnelie; Mark J Post; Anton P M Gorgels; Antoinette D I van Asselt; Gaston Vogel; Simon Schalla; Raymond J Kim; Sebastiaan C A M Bekkers Journal: Am Heart J Date: 2013-10-23 Impact factor: 4.749
Authors: Amy K Saenger; Allan S Jaffe; Richard Body; Paul O Collinson; Peter A Kavsak; Carolyn S P Lam; Guillaume Lefèvre; Tobjørn Omland; Jordi Ordóñez-Llanos; Kari Pulkki; Fred S Apple Journal: Clin Chem Lab Med Date: 2019-04-24 Impact factor: 3.694