Zeitschriftenaufsatz
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2018
Preanalytical validation of an in-house radioimmunoassay for measuring calprotectin in feline specimens
Autor:in
Heilmann, Romy M.; Gruetzner, N.; Handl, S.; Suchodolski, J. S.; Steiner, Jorg M.
Journal
Abstrakt
BackgroundCalprotectin is a marker of inflammatory disorders in people, and serum and fecal calprotectin were shown to be increased in dogs with gastrointestinal inflammation. Biomarkers of gastrointestinal inflammation are currently lacking in cats.
ObjectivesThe purpose of the study was to analytically validate the canine calprotectin radioimmunoassay for quantification of calprotectin in feline specimens.
MethodsThe immunoassay was analytically validated by determining assay working range, dilutional parallelism, spiking recovery, and intra- and inter-assay variability. Reference intervals for fecal calprotectin were established from healthy cats, and the influence of age, sex, and housing condition on fecal calprotectin was determined.
ResultsThe working range of the assay was 1.5-346.2g/g of feces and 11.2-8654.4g/L of serum. Observed-to-expected ratios (O/E) for serial dilutions of fecal extracts ranged from 77.3% to 112.0% (mean: 99.2%) and from 95.7% to 161.4% (mean: 118.5%) for spiking recovery. Intra- and inter-assay coefficients of variation for fecal samples were 11.0% and 12.8%, respectively. Fecal calprotectin concentrations ranged 1.5-66.5g/g (3-day sample mean) and 1.5-126.1g/g (3-day sample maximum). Housing conditions, sex, or age did not affect fecal calprotectin (all P>.05). For serial dilutions of serum samples, O/E ranged from 96.0% to 152.0% (mean: 115.7%). Serum calprotectin concentrations in healthy cats ranged from 108.8 to 255.3g/L (median: 158.2g/L).
ConclusionsThe canine radioimmunoassay for the measurement of calprotectin is analytically sensitive, linear, reproducible, accurate, and sufficiently precise (CV(A)43.2%) for use with feline feces (with a loss of accuracy at high calprotectin concentrations). The RIs for feline fecal calprotectin are comparable to those established for dogs. Independence of fecal calprotectin from age and sex agrees with findings in dogs.
Schlagwörter
Biological variation; cat; fecal; S100A8/A9; serum
Dokumententyp
Originalarbeit
ISSN/eISSN
0275-6382 - 1939-165X
WoS ID
PubMed ID