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Blood spot versus plasma chitotriosidase: A systematic clinical comparison
This study aimed to evaluate the agreement between blood spot and plasma chitotriosidase using the economic substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl-β-D-N,N′,N″-triacetylchitotrioside, and to investigate the utility of the blood spot assay for the wide scale screening for lysosomal storage disorders among the...
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Published in: | Clinical biochemistry 2014-01, Vol.47 (1-2), p.38-43 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | This study aimed to evaluate the agreement between blood spot and plasma chitotriosidase using the economic substrate 4-methylumbelliferyl-β-D-N,N′,N″-triacetylchitotrioside, and to investigate the utility of the blood spot assay for the wide scale screening for lysosomal storage disorders among the clinically suspected.
Blinded blood spot samples were compared with the corresponding plasma levels in 199 children (56 with confirmed diagnoses of ten different lysosomal storage disorders, 73 normal controls and 70 pathological controls). Several performance criteria (limit of detection, linearity, within-run and day-to-day precision and sample stability) were also evaluated.
Plasma assay performed better by most criteria; however, blood spot performance was quite satisfactory. Quantitative values of the two methods can't be used interchangeably based on their 95% limits of agreement. Diagnostic sensitivity and specificity derived from ROC curves were 75.0 and 85.3% for the plasma assay and 71.4 and 79.0% for the blood spot assay, respectively. Cohen's kappa was 0.72 (95% CI: 0.616–0.821) denoting a good categorical agreement between the two methods.
The clinical use of blood spot chitotriosidase for the screening of lysosomal storage disorders can be quite practical, provided proper cut-off values are determined for each lab.
•199 children were recruited to compare blood spot to plasma chitotriosidase.•Linearity, limit of detection, precision and sample stability were evaluated.•All blood spot samples were coded and blinded from the operator.•Plasma had a better performance; however, blood spot performance was acceptable.•Cohen's kappa was 0.72 denoting a good clinical agreement between the two methods. |
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ISSN: | 0009-9120 1873-2933 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2013.10.024 |