Back to Search Start Over

Report from the HarmoSter study

Authors :
Flaminia Fanelli
Stephen Bruce
Marco Cantù
Anastasia Temchenko
Marco Mezzullo
Johanna M. Lindner
Mirko Peitzsch
Pierre-Alain Binz
Mariette T. Ackermans
Annemieke C. Heijboer
Jody Van den Ouweland
Daniel Koeppl
Elena Nardi
Manfred Rauh
Michael Vogeser
Graeme Eisenhofer
Uberto Pagotto
Fanelli, Flaminia
Bruce, Stephen
Cantù, Marco
Temchenko, Anastasia
Mezzullo, Marco
Lindner, Johanna M
Peitzsch, Mirko
Binz, Pierre-Alain
Ackermans, Mariette T
Heijboer, Annemieke C
Van den Ouweland, Jody
Koeppl, Daniel
Nardi, Elena
Rauh, Manfred
Vogeser, Michael
Eisenhofer, Graeme
Pagotto, Uberto
Laboratory for Endocrinology
Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Endocrinology Laboratory
Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
Source :
Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine, 61(1), 67-77. Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, 61(1), 67-77. Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Fanelli, F, Bruce, S, Cantù, M, Temchenko, A, Mezzullo, M, Lindner, J M, Peitzsch, M, Binz, P-A, Ackermans, M T, Heijboer, A C, van den Ouweland, J, Koeppl, D, Nardi, E, Rauh, M, Vogeser, M, Eisenhofer, G & Pagotto, U 2023, ' Report from the HarmoSter study : Inter-laboratory comparison of LC-MS/MS measurements of corticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol and cortisone ', Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, vol. 61, no. 1, pp. 67-77 . https://doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2022-0242
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objectives Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) panels that include glucocorticoid-related steroids are increasingly used to characterize and diagnose adrenal cortical diseases. Limited information is currently available about reproducibility of these measurements among laboratories. The aim of the study was to compare LC-MS/MS measurements of corticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol and cortisone at eight European centers and assess the performance after unification of calibration. Methods Seventy-eight patient samples and commercial calibrators were measured twice by laboratory-specific procedures. Results were obtained according to in-house and external calibration. We evaluated intra-laboratory and inter-laboratory imprecision, regression and agreement against performance specifications derived from 11-deoxycortisol biological variation. Results Intra-laboratory CVs ranged between 3.3 and 7.7%, 3.3 and 11.8% and 2.7 and 12.8% for corticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol and cortisone, with 1, 4 and 3 laboratories often exceeding the maximum allowable imprecision (MAI), respectively. Median inter-laboratory CVs were 10.0, 10.7 and 6.2%, with 38.5, 50.7 and 2.6% cases exceeding the MAI for corticosterone, 11-deoxycortisol and cortisone, respectively. Median laboratory bias vs. all laboratory-medians ranged from −5.6 to 12.3% for corticosterone, −14.6 to 12.4% for 11-deoxycortisol and −4.0 to 6.5% for cortisone, with few cases exceeding the total allowable error. Modest deviations were found in regression equations among most laboratories. External calibration did not improve 11-deoxycortisol and worsened corticosterone and cortisone inter-laboratory comparability. Conclusions Method imprecision was variable. Inter-laboratory performance was reasonably good. However, cases with imprecision and total error above the acceptable limits were apparent for corticosterone and 11-deoxycortisol. Variability did not depend on calibration but apparently on imprecision, accuracy and specificity of individual methods. Tools for improving selectivity and accuracy are required to improve harmonization.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14346621
Volume :
61
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11f7a1d1bcdbfdf251c8333f8ed9a4aa