Abstract
Background: RF(Rheumatoid factor) is usually thought to cause positive interference in immunoassay. Recently, our study showed that high-concentration RFs caused negative interference as well as positive interference in serum HBsAg(Hepatitis B surface antigen) ELISA(Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay), but it is unclear that RF causing negative interference is an anomaly produced by a certain ELISA kit or a common property of most of HBsAg ELISA kits. Methods: Serum models were made by blending HBsAg-positive sera and high- or moderate-concentration RFs sera at the ratio of 1: 9, then one-step and two-step ELISA were adopted to determine HBsAg in serum models. Results: No matter what kind of kit used, one-step ELISA showed that HBsAg S/CO(sample/cut off) values in serum models were significantly lower than original values. Bivariate correlations tests showed decline rates of HBsAg S/CO Values were not associated to serum RF concentrations ranging from 288 to 3560 IU/mL. HBsAg converted to be negative in 69.80% serum models with original-value ranging from 1.00 to 10.00, and in 2.68% serum models with higher original-value. RF causing decline of HBsAg S/CO value provided by one-step ELISA was more obvious than that provided by two-step ELISA. Conclusions: It is concluded that susceptibility of all HBsAg ELISA assays to interference from RF, leading to predominantly lower and in some cases "false-negative" results, and moreover, the lower the original HBsAg S/CO Value, the higher the false-negative rate. © 2013 Xu et al.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Xu, L., Yu, Z., Fan, W., Wang, X., Xie, M., Xu, Y., … Li, Y. (2013). Negative interference in serum HBsAg ELISA from rheumatoid factors. PLoS ONE, 8(11). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0080620
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.