AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the best methods for diagnosing AL amyloidosis by analyzing the effectiveness of three diagnostic tests in identifying amyloidogenic light chains.
  • The research involved 121 patients, where the amyloidogenic light chain was identified via immunoelectron microscopy, and different tests (serum free light chain ratio, commercial IFE, and HR-IFE) were compared for diagnostic sensitivity.
  • Findings showed that combining serum and urine IFE with the FLC ratio yielded the highest sensitivity (100%), emphasizing that a single test is insufficient for accurate diagnosis.

Article Abstract

Background: The diagnosis of systemic immunoglobulin light-chain (AL) amyloidosis requires demonstration of amyloid deposits in a tissue biopsy and amyloidogenic monoclonal light chains. The optimal strategy to identify the amyloidogenic clone has not been established. We prospectively assessed the diagnostic sensitivity of the serum free light chain (FLC) kappa/lambda ratio, a commercial serum and urine agarose gel electrophoresis immunofixation (IFE), and the high-resolution agarose gel electrophoresis immunofixation (HR-IFE) developed at our referral center in patients with AL amyloidosis, in whom the amyloidogenic light chain was unequivocally identified in the amyloid deposits.

Methods: The amyloidogenic light chain was identified in 121 consecutive patients with AL amyloidosis by immunoelectron microscopy analysis of abdominal fat aspirates and/or organ biopsies. We characterized the monoclonal light chain by using IFE and HR-IFE in serum and urine and the FLC kappa/lambda ratio in serum. We then compared the diagnostic sensitivities of the 3 assays.

Results: The HR-IFE of serum and urine identified the amyloidogenic light chain in all 115 patients with a monoclonal gammopathy. Six patients with a biclonal gammopathy were omitted from the statistical analysis. The diagnostic sensitivity of commercial serum and urine IFE was greater than that of the FLC kappa/lambda ratio (96% vs 76%). The combination of serum IFE and the FLC assay detected the amyloidogenic light chain in 96% of patients. The combination of IFE of both serum and urine with the FLC kappa/lambda ratio had a 100% sensitivity.

Conclusions: The identification of amyloidogenic light chains cannot rely on a single test and requires the combination of a commercially available FLC assay with immunofixation of both serum and urine.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1373/clinchem.2008.117143DOI Listing

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