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Standardisation of ACPA tests: evaluation of a new candidate reference preparation

Authors :
Lieve Van Hoovels
Lucy Studholme
Bert Vander Cruyssen
Daniela Sieghart
Carolien Bonroy
Eszter Nagy
Rille Pullerits
Sasa Čučnik
Charlotte Dahle
Ingmar Heijnen
Luca Bernasconi
Farid Benkhadra
Laura Bogaert
Stefanie Van Den Bremt
Ann Van Liedekerke
Geert Vanheule
Johan Robbrecht
Claudine Wirth
Rüdiger Müller
Diego Kyburz
Christopher Sjöwall
Alf Kastbom
Rok Ješe
Boja Jovancevic
Emese Kiss
Peggy Jacques
Daniel Aletaha
Günter Steiner
Patrick Verschueren
Xavier Bossuyt
Source :
ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP, 2022.

Abstract

IntroductionCommercial assays measuring antibodies to citrullinated protein/peptide (ACPA) show poor quantitative agreement. The diagnostic industry has never adopted the International Union of Immunological Societies-Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (IUIS-CDC) ACPA reference standard. Recently, the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control (NIBSC) prepared a new candidate ACPA standard (18/204). We evaluated both reference materials using different commercially available ACPA assays.Materials and methodsThis is an international study in which the NIBSC candidate ACPA standard and the IUIS-CDC ACPA reference material were analysed together with 398 diagnostic samples from individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and in 1073 individuals who did not have RA using nine commercial ACPA assays.ResultsFor both reference materials and samples from individuals with RA and individuals who did not have RA, there were large differences in quantitative ACPA results between assays. For most assays, values for the IUIS-CDC standard were lower than values for NIBSC 18/204 and the IUIS-CDC/NIBSC ratio was comparable for several, but not all assays. When NIBSC 18/204 was used as a calibrator, an improvement in alignment of ACPA results across several of the evaluated assays was obtained. Moreover, NIBSC 18/204 could align clinical interpretation for some but not all assays.ConclusionAdoption of an international standard for ACPA determination is highly desirable. The candidate NIBSC 18/204 standard improved the standardisation and alignment of most ACPA assays and might therefore be recommended to be used as reference in commercial assays.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00034967 and 14682060
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ANNALS OF THE RHEUMATIC DISEASES
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....15f4575246a12b753cc6b26509ac3a9b