Strage, Emma
- Department of Clinical Sciences, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
Research article2015Peer reviewedOpen access
Strage, Emma; Theodorsson, Elvar; Ström Holst, Bodil; Lilliehöök, Inger; Lewitt, M.S.
Background: Insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) measurements are used in veterinary medicine for diagnosing growth hormone disorders. IGF-I assays are subject to interference by IGF-binding proteins (IGFBP) which may not be efficiently removed by standard extraction methods. Adding excess IGF-II during analysis may improve accuracy.Objectives: The purpose of the study was to validate a commercial human IGF-I ELISA which uses excess IGF-II for feline samples and to evaluate biologic variation.Methods: Precision was determined by calculating the coefficient of variation (CV). Accuracy was determined by recovery after removal of IGFBP, addition of IGF-I, and linear dilution after the addition of IGFBP. Biologic variation was determined by repeated sampling in 7 cats.Results: There was interference by IGFBP in the high measuring range, resulting in falsely low IGF-I concentrations. This was overcome by the addition of high concentrations of IGF-II. Untreated serum had a measured/expected ratio of 98-115% compared to serum where IGFBP had been removed. Recovery after the addition of IGF-I was 83-112%. Inter and intra-assay CVs ranged from 2.4% to 5.0% which is within the minimum acceptance criteria based on biologic variation. The reference interval of IGF-I was wide (90-1207 ng/mL) and there was a significant association between body weight and ln IGF-I (P < .000001).Conclusions: This human ELISA is suitable for feline samples, but interfering IGFBP can cause falsely low concentrations. It is recommended to dilute samples such that IGF-I is < 28 ng/mL on the standard curve to grant for sufficient IGF-II for binding of interferent IGFBP.
Growth hormone disorders; insulin-like growth factor-binding proteins; size-exclusion chromatography
Veterinary Clinical Pathology
2015, Volume: 44, number: 4, pages: 542-551 Publisher: WILEY-BLACKWELL
Other Veterinary Science
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/vcp.12289
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/74260