Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 26: 1656-1659, 1980;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 26, 1656-1659, Copyright © 1980 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Reactivity of amniotic fluid alpha-fetoprotein with concanavalin A in relation to gestational age: clinical implications

K Toftager-Larsen, E Kjaersgaard, JC Jacobsen and B Norgaard-Pedersen

We used concanavalin A crossed-line affinity immunoelectrophoresis to determine the percentage of concanavalin A nonreactive alpha- fetoprotein in amniotic fluid samples from pregnancies with normal and abnormal fetuses. In 167 samples from pregnancies with a normal outcome and normal values for total alpha-fetoprotein concentration in amniotic fluid the percentage decreased from a median value of 27.4% in the 13th week to 8.5% in the 21st week of gestation, and a statistically significant (p < 0.001) average decrease of 1.7% per week was found from the 14th to the 19th week. A similar average decrease (2.2%) was found in 22 pregnancies from which two or more samples were obtained. The clinical significance of this decrease is discussed. Of 108 samples from patients with above-normal values for total alpha-fetoprotein and a normal outcome, seven had a total alpha-fetoprotein above recommended cut-off values, and only one of these had a low percentage of concanavalin A nonreactive alpha-fetoprotein. In contrast, for all 27 samples from pregnancies with a severe fetal malformation this percentage was low, even in one case where the total alpha-fetoprotein concentration was below the recommended cut-off value.





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Copyright © 1980 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.