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Characterization of biotin interference in 21 Vitros 5600 immunoassays and risk mitigation for patient safety at a large academic medical center.

Authors :
Stieglitz HM
Korpi-Steiner N
Source :
Clinical biochemistry [Clin Biochem] 2020 Jan; Vol. 75, pp. 53-61. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Oct 31.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Biotin and streptavidin are commonly used reagents in clinical immunoassays. Several cases of biotin interference with immunoassay testing for patients taking biotin supplements have been reported, yet, not all analytes and platforms susceptible to biotin interference have been characterized. The objectives of this study are to characterize biotin interference with 21 immunoassays using the Ortho Clinical Diagnostics Vitros 5600, evaluate a biotin-depletion method, and apply risk mitigation strategies for biotin interference during routine clinical testing at our institution.<br />Methods: Residual serum without and with increasing concentrations of exogenous biotin were used to evaluate biotin interference with 21 immunoassays using the Vitros 5600. Biotin-depletion was evaluated by comparing measured analyte concentrations in serum with and without exogenous biotin and streptavidin-microparticle pretreatment. Focused education for healthcare professionals about biotin interference was performed in February 2018. Samples with suspected biotin interference were investigated using this biotin-depletion method, and analyte testing by alternate methodology for select samples.<br />Results: Exogenous biotin in serum caused dose-dependent negative biases in 15 immunometric assays, and dose-dependent positive biases in 6 competitive immunoassays. Streptavidin-microparticle pretreatment of serum containing exogenous biotin demonstrated recoveries 100 ± 15% of expected values for all 21 analytes. Physicians identified 21 samples suspicious for biotin interference over 11 months, and streptavidin-microparticle pretreatment verified 11 cases of biotin interference.<br />Conclusions: Analytical bias caused by biotin interference is dependent on biotin concentration but independent of analyte concentration for immunometric methods using the Vitros 5600, and dependent on both biotin and analyte concentration for competitive immunoassays. Multi-disciplinary education and a lab streptavidin-microparticle pretreatment method help mitigate risk of erroneous results due to biotin interference for patient safety.<br /> (Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-2933
Volume :
75
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinical biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31677994
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clinbiochem.2019.09.006