Evaluation of free thyroxine determination based on one-step fluorometric immunoassay technique and the suboptimal concordance with two-step immunoassay

J Pharm Biomed Anal. 2018 Oct 25:160:187-194. doi: 10.1016/j.jpba.2018.07.045. Epub 2018 Jul 26.

Abstract

Free thyroxine (FT4) quantification is continuing to be a concern. The purpose of the following study was to evaluate the analytical performance of Tosoh AIA900 based on a one-step technique and its comparison to Access 2 (two-step technique) over different clinical contexts (euthyroid, thyroid disorders, uncontrolled diabetes, renal failure and pregnancy). The protocol established by the French society of Clinical Biology was used to evaluate: imprecision, limit of detection, trueness, linearity, interferences and method comparisons. Within-run variation of 3.1%, 5.7% and 4.4% were found for the low, medium and high controls, respectively. Between-run was 5.8% for low control, 5.7% for medium control and 7.1% for high control. Common interferences did not affect one-step immunoassay FT4 results. The linearity was checked up to 86 pmol/L. The limit of detection was 5.5 pmol/L. The concordance correlation coefficient (CCC) showed a low agreement (0.6) between both methods. Bland-Altman plot revealed that AIA 900 one-step immunoassay technique provides a significant higher values ((+2.8 ± 2.7 pmol/L;p < 0.0001). The Passing-Bablok regression demonstrated both proportional and systematic differences in comparison to Access 2. The lowest association was noted in subjects with impaired renal function (CCC = 0.27). At the time of the study, the results of on-step immunoassay are not directly comparable with Access 2.

Keywords: Analytical evaluation; Immunoassay; Method comparison; Standardization; Techniques discrepancy; Thyroid hormones.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Diabetes Mellitus / blood
  • Evaluation Studies as Topic*
  • Female
  • Fluorometry / instrumentation
  • Fluorometry / methods*
  • Fluorometry / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Immunoassay / instrumentation
  • Immunoassay / methods*
  • Immunoassay / standards
  • Limit of Detection
  • Male
  • Pregnancy / blood
  • Renal Insufficiency / blood
  • Thyroid Diseases / blood
  • Thyroxine / analysis*
  • Thyroxine / blood

Substances

  • Thyroxine