Clinical Chemistry
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Clinical Chemistry 48: 269-277, 2002;
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(Clinical Chemistry. 2002;48:269-277.)
© 2002 American Association for Clinical Chemistry, Inc.

Ultrarapid, Ultrasensitive One-Step Kinetic Immunoassay for C-Reactive Protein (CRP) in Whole Blood Samples: Measurement of the Entire CRP Concentration Range with a Single Sample Dilution

Piia Tarkkinen1a, Tom Palenius2b and Timo Lövgren1

1 Department of Biotechnology, University of Turku, Tykistökatu 6A, 6th Floor, FIN-20520 Turku, Finland.

2 PerkinElmer Life Sciences/Wallac Oy, PO Box 10, FIN-20101 Turku, Finland.

aAuthor for correspondence. Fax 358-2-333-8050; e-mail piia.tarkkinen{at}utu.fi.b Current address: AboaTech Ltd, FIN-20520 Turku, Finland.

Background: Recently, measurement of very low concentrations of C-reactive protein (CRP) has gained popularity as a potential new means for predicting the risk of future cardiac complications. In this study, we demonstrate the feasibility of a kinetic, one-step microparticle assay for quantitative determination of extremely low and high CRP concentrations in the limited timeframe typical for point-of-care testing.

Methods: A noncompetitive, kinetic CRP immunoassay was developed that uses individual, porous microparticles as the solid phase. The microparticles were covalently coated with a monoclonal capture antibody, and the monoclonal detection antibody was labeled with europium. The one-step binding reaction was stopped by washing after 2 min of incubation, and the fluorescence signal of individual particles was measured.

Results: The analytical detection limit (mean of zero calibrator + 3 SD) was 0.00016 mg/L CRP. Clinical samples were diluted 400-fold before assay to cover the CRP concentration range of 0.064–1200 mg/L. The assay correlated well with the Dade Behring N High Sensitivity CRP assay (for 0–10 mg/L, r = 0.969, Sy|x = 0.68, n = 54; for 0–350 mg/L, r = 0.969, Sy|x = 11.7, n = 100). The within- and between-run CVs based on calculated concentrations were, respectively, 9–16% and 14% at 0.11 mg/L, 4.5–12% and 8.2% at 4.2 mg/L, and 3.5–6.3% and 4.4% at 105 mg/L, with a CV <15% at 0.2 mg/L and above.

Conclusions: Use of the kinetic microparticle approach combined with time-resolved fluorometry allows ultrasensitive quantification of CRP in whole blood in 2 min with a linear assay range spanning more than four orders of magnitude.




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