AI Article Synopsis

  • A gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) assay was developed to measure plasma oxalate levels, specifically designed for pediatric patients with primary hyperoxaluria.
  • The method included a thorough validation process, revealing a detection limit of 0.78 μmol/L and a linear range up to 80.0 μmol/L, with acceptable precision and recovery rates.
  • Results indicated that while specific cut-off values help differentiate primary from non-primary hyperoxaluria, plasma oxalate levels can be influenced by various factors like sample preparation and medications, highlighting the need for clinical context in interpretation.

Article Abstract

Background: Plasma oxalate measurements can be used for the screening and therapeutic monitoring of primary hyperoxaluria. We developed a gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) assay for plasma oxalate measurements with high sensitivity and suitable testing volumes for pediatric populations.

Methods: Plasma oxalate was extracted, derivatized, and analyzed by GC-MS. We measured the ion at m/z 261.10 to quantify oxalate and the C-oxalate ion (m/z: 263.15) as the internal standard. Method validation included determination of the linear range, limit of blank, limit of detection, lower limit of quantification, precision, recovery, carryover, interference, and dilution effect. The cut-off value between primary and non-primary hyperoxaluria in a pediatric population was analyzed.

Results: The detection limit was 0.78 μmol/L, and the linear range was up to 80.0 μmol/L. The between-day precision was 5.7% at 41.3 μmol/L and 13.1% at 1.6 μmol/L. The carryover was <0.2%. The recovery rate ranged from 90% to 110%. Interference analysis showed that Hb did not interfere with plasma oxalate quantification, whereas intralipids and bilirubin caused false elevation of oxalate concentrations. A cut-off of 13.9 μmol/L showed 63% specificity and 77% sensitivity, whereas a cut-off of 4.15 μmol/L showed 100% specificity and 20% sensitivity. The minimum required sample volume was 250 μL. The detected oxalate concentrations showed interference from instrument conditioning, sample preparation procedures, medications, and various clinical conditions.

Conclusions: GC-MS is a sensitive assay for quantifying plasma oxalate and is suitable for pediatric patients. Plasma oxalate concentrations should be interpreted in a clinical context.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10813830PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3343/alm.2023.0178DOI Listing

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