Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 33: 2096-2100, 1987;
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Clinical Chemistry, Vol 33, 2096-2100, Copyright © 1987 by American Association for Clinical Chemistry

Chemiluminescence immunoassay of thyrotropin with acridinium-ester- labeled antibody evaluated and compared with two other immunoassays

MP Bounaud, JY Bounaud, MH Bouin-Pineau, L Orget and F Begon
Laboratoire de Biophysique Cellulaire, Hopital Jean Bernard, Poitiers, France.

A new chemiluminometric immunoassay of thyrotropin (TSH) involves antibody labeled with acridinium ester ("Magic Lite System," Ciba Corning Diagnostic Corp.). The assay is rapid, with two incubations totaling 2.5 h, requires two standards per run, and takes 10 s per sample for the quantification step. Analytical performance, within- and between-run reproducibilities, and linearity were excellent. The detection limit is 0.04 milli-int. unit/L. Results correlated well with those obtained by immunoradiometric assay (RIA-gnost hTSH, Hoechst- Behring) and immunofluorometric assay (hTSH Delfia, LKB): r = 0.975. TSH measurements in 32 euthyroid subjects ranged from 0.4 to 4.8 milli- int. units/L (mean 1.35 milli-int. units/L). TSH values for 51 hypothyroid and subclinically hypothyroid patients ranged from 2 to 65 milli-int. units/L. TSH values for 33 hyperthyroid patients (less than 0.14 milli-int. unit/L, less than 0.04 milli-int. unit/L in 16 of the 33) were clearly lower than for most untreated euthyroid subjects. For 169 other individuals whose thyroid function was being routinely assessed. TSH ranged from 0.4 to 4.8 milli-int. units/L, three had TSH less than 0.14 milli-int. unit/L, and four had TSH between 0.14 and 0.4 milli-int. unit/L. This system is as efficient and reliable for screening for thyroid function as the two comparison systems.





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Copyright © 1987 by the American Association for Clinical Chemistry.