Glycated hemoglobin is widely used in the management of diabetes mellitus. At least 300,000 Americans with diabetes mellitus have the hemoglobin (Hb) C or S trait. The accuracy of HbA1c methods can be adversely affected by the presence of these traits. We evaluated the effects of HbC and HbS traits on the results of 14 commercial HbA1c methods that use boronate affinity, enzymatic, immunoassay, and ion exchange methods. Whole blood samples from people homozygous for HbA or heterozygous for HbC or HbS were analyzed for HbA1c. Results for each sample type were compared with those from the CLC 330 comparative method (Primus Diagnostics, Kansas City, MO). After correcting for calibration bias by comparing results from the homozygous HbA group, method bias attributable to the presence of HbC or HbS trait was evaluated with a clinically significant difference being more than 10% (ie, 0.6% at 6% HbA1c). One immunoassay method exhibited clinically significant differences owing to the presence of HbC and HbS traits.
Cancer antigen 125 (CA 125) is a high-molecular-mass glycoprotein that is used as a tumor marker to monitor disease progression and response to therapy and in early detection of recurrence after treatment for ovarian cancer. The Access 2 (Beckman Coulter, Brea, CA), ADVIA Centaur (Bayer Diagnostics, Tarrytown, NY), ARCHITECT i2000 (Abbott Diagnostics, Abbott Park, IL), AxSYM (Abbott Diagnostics), Elecsys 2010 (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN), IMMULITE 2000 (Diagnostic Products, Los Angeles, CA), and VITROS ECi (Ortho Clinical Diagnostics, Raritan, NJ) assays for CA 125 were evaluated for detection limit, dilution linearity, imprecision, correlation, and reference intervals. The maximum average deviation from target recoveries for dilution linearity studies ranged from 3.7% for the ADVIA Centaur to 18.2% for the IMMULITE 2000. Imprecision studies yielded total coefficients of variation of 2.0% to 8.3% at CA 125 concentrations of 35 and 114 U/mL (35 and 114 kU/L). Method comparison studies revealed good agreement with the VITROS ECi comparison method, with slopes ranging between 0.88 to 1.19 and correlation coefficients of more than 0.95. All methods show acceptable performance characteristics and generally compare well. However, for some samples, substantial differences exist between methods, necessitating parallel testing when introducing a new method.
Cancer antigen 125 (CA 125) is a high-molecular-mass glycoprotein that is used as a tumor marker to monitor disease progression and response to therapy and in early detection of recurrence after treatment for ovarian cancer. The Access 2 (Beckman Coulter, Brea, CA), ADVIA Centaur (Bayer Diagnostics, Tarrytown, NY), ARCHITECT i2000 (Abbott Diagnostics, Abbott Park, IL), AxSYM (Abbott Diagnostics), Elecsys 2010 (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, IN), IMMULITE 2000 (Diagnostic Products, Los Angeles, CA), and VITROS ECi (Ortho Clinical Diagnostics, Raritan, NJ) assays for CA 125 were evaluated for detection limit, dilution linearity, imprecision, correlation, and reference intervals. The maximum average deviation from target recoveries for dilution linearity studies ranged from 3.7% for the ADVIA Centaur to 18.2% for the IMMULITE 2000. Imprecision studies yielded total coefficients of variation of 2.0% to 8.3% at CA 125 concentrations of 35 and 114 U/mL (35 and 114 kU/L). Method comparison studies revealed good agreement with the VITROS ECi comparison method, with slopes ranging between 0.88 to 1.19 and correlation coefficients of more than 0.95. All methods show acceptable performance characteristics and generally compare well. However, for some samples, substantial differences exist between methods, necessitating parallel testing when introducing a new method.
We describe two unrelated patients with mental retardation and normal karyotypes found to have relatively large homozygous deletions (>150 kb) of different regions detected by array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH). Patient 1 showed a 157-214 kb deletion at 8q24.2, containing BAC clone RP11-17M8. This patient was born to phenotypically normal parents and has microcephaly, distinctive craniofacial features, brachymetacarpia, brachymetatarsia and severe mental retardation. This BAC clone is listed as a copy number variant on the Database of Genomic Variants (http://projects.tcag.ca/variation/). Heterozygosity for the deletion was found in the mother (father is deceased) and uniparental disomy of chromosome 8 was excluded. Patient 2 showed a 812-902 kb deletion at 12q21.1, containing BAC clone RP11-89P15. This region was not listed in any public database as a known variant. This patient has mild craniofacial dysmorphic features, bifid uvula, peripheral pulmonic stenosis and developmental delay. Heterozygosity for this deletion was confirmed in the phenotypically normal parents and two normal siblings, but surprisingly, homozygosity for the deletion in an apparently normal younger sibling brings into question whether this large homozygous copy number change (CNC) is causal. Homozygous deletions of CNCs have not previously been reported in association with a phenotype or mental retardation. These cases represent homozygosity for presumably benign CNCs, and while causality for the phenotypes cannot be confirmed, similar deletions are bound to be identified more frequently as aCGH is used with increasing regularity. Such homozygous deletions should be viewed as potentially clinically relevant.
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