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Assessment of Abbott Architect 25-OH vitamin D assay in different levels of vitamin D.
Avci, Esin; Demir, Süleyman; Aslan, Diler; Nar, Rukiye; Senol, Hande.
Affiliation
  • Avci E; Pamukkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, Denizli, Turkey.
  • Demir S; Pamukkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, Denizli, Turkey.
  • Aslan D; Pamukkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, Denizli, Turkey.
  • Nar R; Pamukkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biochemistry, Denizli, Turkey.
  • Senol H; Pamukkale University, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Biostatistics, Denizli, Turkey.
J Med Biochem ; 39(1): 100-107, 2020 Jan 10.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32549783
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

There is increasing requests of Vitamin D test in many clinical settings in recent years. However, immunoassay performance is still a controversial topic. Several diagnostic manufacturers have launched automated 25-hydroxyvitamin D (25-OH D) immunoassays in the past decade. We compared the performance of Abbott Architect 25-OH D Vitamin immunoassay with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry systems (LCMS/MS) to evaluate immunoassay performance, especially in deficient groups.

METHODS:

Eighty human serum samples were analyzed with Architect 25-OH D vitamin kit (Abbott Diagnostics, Lake Forest, IL, USA) and LC-MS/MS systems (Zivak Technology, Istanbul, Turkey). The results of the immunoassay method were compared with the LC-MS/MS using Passing-Bablok regression analysis, Bland-Altman plots and correlation coefficient analysis. We also evaluated results in four levels of D vitamin as a severe deficiency, deficiency, insufficiency, and sufficiency.

RESULTS:

Architect showed 9.59% bias from LC-MS/MS with smaller mean. Passing-Bablok regression analysis demonstrated the value of 0.95 slope and had a constant bias with an intercept value of -4.25. Concordance correlation coefficient showed moderate agreement with the value of 0.918 (95% CI 0.878-0.945). Two methods revealed good interrater agreement (kappa = 0.738). While the smallest bias determined in deficiency (9.95%) group, the biggest was in insufficiency (15.15%).

CONCLUSIONS:

Architect 25-OH D vitamin immunoassay can be used in routine measurements but had potential misclassification of vitamin D status in insufficient and deficient groups. Although there are recent standardization attempts in 25-OH D measurements, clinical laboratories must be aware of this method.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: J Med Biochem Year: 2020 Document type: Article Affiliation country:

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: J Med Biochem Year: 2020 Document type: Article Affiliation country: