| Literature DB >> 34539570 |
Rivak Punchoo1,2, Sachin Bhoora2.
Abstract
Anti-Müllerian Hormone (AMH) is a 140 kDa homodimeric glycoprotein consisting of two identical subunits linked by disulphide bonds and is synthesised by the testes and ovaries. Its clinical applications are prediction of ovarian response and gonadotropin dose selection upon in vitro fertilization. In males, AMH is used to investigate sexual developmental disorders and gonadal function. AMH is commonly assayed by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay or automated immunoassay formats that show variation between methods. This review applies fundamental chemical pathology concepts to explain the observed analytical variation of AMH measurement. We examine the lack of standardisation between AMH assays, the impact of antibody design on variable measurements, consider the analytical detection of AMH isoforms, review analytical interference in AMH measurement, and briefly assess systematic bias between AMH assays. The improved attempt at standardising AMH measurement by the recent approval of a WHO Reference Reagent offers promise for harmonising immunoassay results and establishing consensus medical cut-off points for AMH in disease. Standardisation, however, will need to redress the issue of poor commutability of standard reference material and further assign a standard reference procedure to quantify AMH standard reference material. The improvement of the analytical phase of AMH testing will support harmonised method development and patient care.Entities:
Keywords: AMH; Anti-Müllerian Hormone; MIS; Müellerian inhibiting substance; analytical interference; standardisation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34539570 PMCID: PMC8446602 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2021.719029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Analytical characteristics of immunoassays currently used to measure AMH (9–13).
| Assay parameters | Gen II ELISA | Ultra-sensitive AMH/MIS ELISA | MenoCheck® picoAMH ELISA | Access AMH | Elecsys® AMH Immunoassay | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Manufacturer | Beckman Coulter Diagnostics (Texas, USA) | Ansh Laboratories (Texas, USA) | Ansh Laboratories (Texas, USA) | Beckman Coulter Diagnostics (Texas, USA) | Roche Diagnostics International Ltd. (Indiana, USA) | |
| Assay format | Test format | ELISA (2 site manual immunoassay) | Sandwich type ELISA | Sandwich type immunoassay | Automated immunoassay | Automated immunoassay |
| Primary antibody | Anti-AMH IgG immobilised to microtiter plate well | AMH antibody coated to microtiter plate | Biotinylated antibody coated microtiter plate | Mouse monoclonal anti-AMH antibody alkaline phosphatase conjugate | Antibody-antigen ‘sandwich’ complex with two mammalian monoclonal antibodies conjugated to biotin and ruthenium | |
| Secondary antibody and/or conjugation system | Antibody-biotin conjugate and streptavidin -enzyme conjugate | Biotinylated anti-AMH secondary antibody | Streptavidin-HRP conjugate | Chemiluminescent substrate | Ruthenium/tripropylamine conjugate | |
| Detection system | TMB chromogen substrate | SHRP conjugate | TMB substrate | Chemiluminescent detection | Chemiluminescent detection | |
| Calibrators | Calibrator traceability | Manufacturer’s working calibrators | Internal calibrator is traceable to rhAMH | |||
| Calibrator levels | 7 levels | 6 levels | 6 levels | Multipoint calibration | ||
| Calibrator concentration range | 0 - 22.5 ng/ml | Not disclosed | 0 - 1.100 pg/ml | |||
| Matrix | Protein-based matrix | |||||
| Assay sensitivity | Limit of detection (LoD) | 0.023 ng/ml | 1.3 pg/ml | ≤ 0.02 ng/ml | 0.010 ng/ml | |
| Limit of quantification (LoQ) with < 20% CV | 0.06 ng/ml | 3.2 pg/ml | ≤ 0.08 ng/ml | 0.030 ng/ml | ||
| Assay imprecision (based on maximum CV at low and high AMH levels) | Intra-assay CV (%) [AMH] | 5.4% (4.42 ng/ml) | 6.03 (0.72 ng/ml) | 5.5% (14.6 pg/ml) | 1 – 2.6% (0.046 - 20.8 ng/ml) | |
| Inter-assay CV (%); [AMH] | 5.6% (4.42 ng/ml) | 6.7% (15.5 pg/ml) | 2.5 – 3.9% (0.046 - 20.8 ng/ml) | |||
| Total imprecision | 7.7% (4.42 ng/ml) | < 10% (≥ 0.16 ng/ml) | < 5% | |||
| Measuring range | 0.16- 22.5 ng/ml | 6.0 – 1.150 pg/ml | 0.08 – 24 ng/mL | 0.01 – 23 ng/ml | ||
| Extended measuring range with dilution step | 23.000 pg/ml | 240 ng/ml | ||||
CV, coefficient of variation; ELISA, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay; HRP, horseradish peroxidase; rhAMH, recombinant human AMH; SHRP, streptavidin horseradishperoxidase; TMB, tetramethylbenzidine.
Method comparison evaluations between commercial AMH assays.
| Assay comparison | Regression equation | Analytical and clinical commentary | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Elecsys® = (0.81 X Gen II) – 0.046 | • Elecsys® AMH values were substantially lower compared to Gen II assay, emphasising a need for an international AMH calibrator. | ( |
| Elecsys® = (0.68 X Gen II) + 0.769 | ( | ||
| Elecsys® = (0.729 X Gen II) + 0.087 | ( | ||
| Elecsys® = (0.88 X Gen II) - 0.039 | ( | ||
|
| Access = (0.78 X Gen II) + 0.128 | • The automated assay correlated with the Gen II (R=0.996), but with improved sensitivity. | ( |
| Access = (0.91 X Gen II) – 0.033 | • Access AMH assay read lower in comparison to the Gen II assay. | ( | |
| Access = (1.001 X Gen II) + 0.341 | • The Access AMH assay performed similarly on two analysers: Beckman Coulter Gen II and Dx1800. | ( | |
|
| Ultrasensitive AMH = (1.4 X Gen II) + 1.7 | • Acceptable imprecision CV% < 6.0% and 10.7% for ultrasensitive and picoAMH assays, respectively. | ( |
|
| Gen II = (1.353 X IOT) + 0.051 | • The Gen II assay was developed when the DSL assay and the IOT assay were purchased by Beckman Coulter. The Gen II assay uses antibodies from the DSL assay and AMH calibrators from the IOT assay. | ( |
|
| Gen II = (1.223 X DSL) -1.270 | ( | |
|
| Elecsys® = (0.97 X Access) + 0.003 | • The automated assays were calibrated by independent manufacturer calibrators. The assays compared very favourably with each other, even at low AMH concentration. Another small single centre study supports this observation ( | ( |
| Access = (-0.05 X Elecsys®) + 1.10 | • The Access assay gave systematically higher AMH values resulting in misclassification of women (29%) to ovarian stimulation dosing. | ( |
Access, (Access AHM, Beckman Coulter Diagnostics, Texas, USA); DSL, Diagnostic Systems Laboratories (Texas, USA); Elecsys®, Elecsys® AMH (Roche Diagnostics Laboratories, Indiana, USA); Gen II, AMH Gen II ELISA (Beckman Coulter Diagnostics, Texas, USA); IOT, Immunotech (Marseille, France); n, number of participants; Ultrasensitive AMH, Ultra-sensitive AMH/MIS ELISA (Ansh Laboratories, Texas, USA); vs, versus.