Direct Immunoassay for Free Pregnancy-Associated Plasma Protein A (PAPP-A)

J Appl Lab Med. 2018 Nov 1;3(3):438-449. doi: 10.1373/jalm.2018.026096.

Abstract

Background: Pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPP-A), especially in its noncomplexed form (fPAPP-A), is linked to vulnerable atherosclerotic plaques and risk of cardiac events. An assay for sensitive detection of fPAPP-A has been lacking. Our aim was to develop and validate a direct fPAPP-A assay to meet this need.

Methods: Monoclonal antibodies binding exclusively fPAPP-A were produced by immunizing mice with recombinant PAPP-A. In the optimized immunoassay, we used an fPAPP-A-specific capture antibody together with a lanthanide-chelate-labeled monoclonal antibody recognizing all PAPP-A forms. The assay was evaluated with CLSI guidelines and compared to a 2-assay subtractive fPAPP-A approach. Clinical performance was assessed with acute coronary syndrome patients.

Results: The limits of detection and quantitation were 0.4 mIU/L and 1.3 mIU/L, respectively, and the assay was linear up to 1000 mIU/L (R2 = 0.999). Both serum and heparin plasma were suitable matrices, and the complexed form of PAPP-A caused no significant interference. Correlation between the developed assay and the 2-assay approach was fair (Pearson's r = 0.819). Median concentration in healthy individuals was 1.0 mIU/L. fPAPP-A concentration was higher in patients who had myocardial infarction or died during the 1-year follow-up period than in those who did not (1.13 mIU/L vs 0.82 mIU/L, P = 0.008, model adjusted with age and sex). fPAPP-A measured with this direct assay predicted this end point as well as (follow-up 1 year) or better (30 days) than the 2-assay fPAPP-A alone or in combination with cTnI.

Conclusions: The new assay enables sensitive and reliable measurement of low cardiac-related fPAPP-A concentrations from blood samples.