A comprehensive cross-platform and cross-assay evaluation using nine technology platforms and four cytokine immunoassays (IL-6, TNFα, IL-17a, IL-2) was performed by comparing assay precision, sensitivity, parallelism and data correlation between platforms. The precision was acceptable for most evaluated assays. In addition to comparing the analytical assay sensitivity using a spiked recombinant analyte in buffer, forty serum samples from both normal controls and multiple sclerosis patients were used to measure the frequency of endogenous analyte detection (FEAD) as a parameter of each assay's ability to detect the endogenous analyte. The highest FEAD measurements were observed on the Simoa™, Erenna®, Milliplex® and Imperacer® platforms. However, only Simoa and Erenna results showed a high correlation across all evaluated cytokine assays, followed by a more moderate correlation of results across platforms for the V-plex™, high sensitivity ELISA and the Ella™ IL-6 and TNFα assays. In contrast, results from the evaluated cytokine assays on the Milliplex, AMMP™ ViBE® and Imperacer platforms did not correlate to each other nor to other evaluated assays. Acceptable parallelism was observed for the Simoa, Erenna, V-plex and Ella assays but not for the Milliplex, AMMP ViBE and Imperacer assays. In conclusion, the Simoa, Erenna,V-plex and Ella platforms performed well in one or more evaluated cytokine assays. Among those, the Simoa and Erenna assays had the highest sensitivity for detection of cytokines present at sub-pg/mL levels in human serum. In addition, the cross-platform and cross-assay comparisons demonstrated that different immunoassays may yield different results, which underscores the importance of performing such comparative evaluations, especially in the absence of reliable reference standards for the quantitative assessments of biomarkers in immunoassays.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jim.2016.08.003 | DOI Listing |
Bioanalysis
June 2017
Genentech, 1 DNA Way, South San Francisco, CA 94080, USA.
Aim: We evaluated three immunoassay-based technologies and their biomarker kits, by determining precision, parallelism and detectability of analytes of interest.
Materials & Methods: We compared ultrasensitive assays for three biomarkers: interleukins IL-6, IL-13 and IL-17A using kits obtained from Roche (IMPACT platform - proprietary platform), Singulex (Erenna) and Quanterix (Simoa). We defined the true LLOD as the LLOQs, and provided disease-specific parallelism results and detectability levels for endogenous analyte, which were good across platforms, though they varied from analyte to analyte.
J Immunol Methods
October 2016
Biogen, 250 Binney Street, Cambridge, MA 02142, USA. Electronic address:
A comprehensive cross-platform and cross-assay evaluation using nine technology platforms and four cytokine immunoassays (IL-6, TNFα, IL-17a, IL-2) was performed by comparing assay precision, sensitivity, parallelism and data correlation between platforms. The precision was acceptable for most evaluated assays. In addition to comparing the analytical assay sensitivity using a spiked recombinant analyte in buffer, forty serum samples from both normal controls and multiple sclerosis patients were used to measure the frequency of endogenous analyte detection (FEAD) as a parameter of each assay's ability to detect the endogenous analyte.
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