Context: Macroprolactin (macroPRL), present in as many as 25% of serum specimens with elevated serum prolactin concentrations, can cause apparent hyperprolactinemia in the absence of clinical features and lead to unnecessary clinical, laboratory, and neuroradiological workups.
Objective: To develop an ultrafiltration method that eliminates macroPRL interference from PRL immunoassays.
Design: The method involves centrifugation of undiluted serum in a Centricon-100 filter device followed by a PRL assay of the serum ultrafiltrate.
Results: Ultrafiltrates prepared by this technique are devoid of gamma globulins and contain (mean +/- SE) 19% +/- 7% of the albumin concentration of the original serum. These ultrafiltrates contain 85% +/- 7% of the total PRL immunoreactivity of serum spiked with 23 kd recombinant human prolactin (rHuPRL) and less than 2% of the 50 kd big PRL (bPRL) of whole serum. The fractional recovery of ultrafilterable PRL (uPRL) from serum samples of 54 female patients was 0.78 (confidence interval 0.73-0.83) of the total. The run-to-run coefficient of variation of the uPRL assay was 4.3%. The uPRL concentration (mean +/- SD) in a group of healthy female controls was 8.0 +/- 3.1 ng/mL.
Conclusions: Ultrafiltration is a rapid and simple method for eliminating analytical interference by macroPRL. Ultrafiltrates can be analyzed by most, if not all, currently available PRL immunoassays and represent a practical and precise alternative to gel filtration chromatography for the estimation of the monomeric prolactin concentration of serum.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.5858/2006-130-1807-DOUPEO | DOI Listing |
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