Therapeutic monitoring of cyclosporine: Impact of a change in standards on125I-monoclonal RIA performance in comparison with liquid chromatography

7Citations
Citations of this article
4Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

This study examines the measurement of cyclosporine (CsA) by 125I-monoclonal RIA, and describes the impact of the recent change in the standard curve provided. CsA concentrations in serum and whole-blood control samples measured by 125I-RIA were initially 8-18% higher than those by HPLC. During the first two months of 1989, a significant and sustained deviation in the 125I-RIA produced results that exceeded the HPLC results by 21-28% (P <0.001). Introduction of the new standard curve in March 1989 returned the concentration of the whole-blood controls to the previous range (11-12% above HPLC, P <0.001). Measurement of clinical samples from heart, liver, and bone-marrow graft recipients by 125I-RIA by both old and new kit standards produced a close linear correlation (y = 0.89 x - 19.02; r = 0.99; n = 75, range = 40-850 μg/L), with use of the new standards yielding results 82 (SD 8)% of those with the preceding assay. However, even with the new standard curve, CsA concentrations by 125I-RIA in the clinical samples exceeded those by HPLC by a factor of 1.37 (SD 0.18) to 1.52 (SD 0.19). Segregation for transplant type did not affect the RIA/ HPLC ratio. The results suggest cross-reactivity of the 125I-RIA with material present in vivo.

Author supplied keywords

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Keown, P. A., Glenn, J., Denegri, J., Maciejewska, U., Seccombe, D., Staweckl, M., … Phillips, G. (1990). Therapeutic monitoring of cyclosporine: Impact of a change in standards on125I-monoclonal RIA performance in comparison with liquid chromatography. Clinical Chemistry, 36(5), 804–807. https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/36.5.804

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free