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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 21, 1520-1522, Copyright © 1975 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry
1 Medical Service, Boston Veterans Administration Hospital; and
the Departments of Medicine of Boston University and Tufts University Schools of Medicine, Boston, Mass. 02130.
Human serum can be depleted of insulin and growth hormone by treatment with dextran-coated charcoal or by dialysis, or both. Inclusion of such hormone-depleted serum in the standard curve of a double-antibody radioimmunoassay for immunoreactive insulin more nearly mimics the conditions under which an unknown human serum sample is assayed. Compared to the usual standard curve in which serum albumin is the only protein, the addition of hormone-depleted serum can cause an increase (by an average 64% under the conditions we used) in the absolute value for apparent insulin in serum. The effect of hormone-depleted serum should be tested in the standard curves of double-antibody radioimmunoassays and included routinely in these standard curves if it changes the results. When used in conjunction with an eventual reference standard for human insulin, this modification of the insulin assay may make the measured values of human serum insulin from different laboratories more comparable.
Submitted on April 11, 1975
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