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Title: | Migration from RIA to LC-MS/MS for aldosterone determination: Implications for clinical practice and determination of plasma and urine reference range intervals in a cohort of healthy Belgian subjects | Authors: | Le Goff, Caroline M. González Antuña, Ana Peeters, Stéphanie D. Fabregat-Cabello, Neus Van Der Gugten, Jessica G. Vroonen, Laurent Pottel, Hans Holmes, Daniel T. Cavalier, Etienne |
UNESCO Clasification: | 32 Ciencias médicas 320502 Endocrinología 2403 Bioquímica |
Keywords: | Aldosterone Primary aldosteronism Liquid chromatography Mass spectrometry Immunoassay |
Issue Date: | 2018 | Journal: | Clinical Mass Spectrometry | Abstract: | Background. Aldosterone measurement is critical for diagnosis of primary aldosteronism and disorders of the renin-angiotensin system. We developed an LC-MS/MS method for plasma and urinary aldosterone and compared it to our RIA method. We present a reference interval study for a Belgian population. Methods. 68 plasma and 23 urine samples were assayed for as part of a method comparison. For the reference interval study, we enrolled 282 healthy Caucasian volunteers (114 Male: mean age 35 ± 11 y and 168 Female: mean age 42 ± 13 y). A subset of 139 healthy volunteers agreed to a 24-h urine collection. For the method validation, 5 plasma and 8 urine pools were run in triplicate and quadruplicate, respectively, on 3 different days. Results. Between-run imprecision (CV) was 2.8–5.1% for plasma and 4.5–8.6% for urine, except at the low urine concentration of 2.99 nmol/L where a CV of 15.4% was observed. The limit of quantitation was 0.04 nmol/L for plasma and 6.65 nmol/L for urine. Recoveries, based on spiking experiments into natural matrix, did not differ significantly from 100%. Regression comparisons showed that, on average, RIA generated results were 59% and 11% higher than LC-MS/MS for plasma and urine, respectively. The MS reference interval we propose for plasma aldosterone is 0.07 nmol/L–0.73 nmol/L for women and 0.04 nmol/L–0.41 nmol/L for men. No gender difference was observed for urine aldosterone. The reference interval was determined to be <60.94 nmol/day. Conclusions. The LC-MS/MS method was validated and reference intervals for plasma and urine were established. A significant bias between RIA and LC-MS/MS was noted. | URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10553/45324 | ISSN: | 2376-9998 | DOI: | 10.1016/j.clinms.2018.06.002 | Source: | Clinical Mass Spectrometry [ISSN 2376-9998] , v. 9, p. 7-17 |
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