SFEBES2022 Poster Presentations Adrenal and Cardiovascular (66 abstracts)
Norfolk and Norwich University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Norwich, United Kingdom
Background: The displacement of cortisol from its binding globulin (CBG) in the Abbott Alinity immunoassay assumes an average concentration of CBG in all individuals. Displacement buffer volume, and/or composition, is frequently insufficient to displace cortisol where higher concentrations of CBG are present (e.g. with higher oestrogen concentrations). To address this bias, the Eastern Pathology Alliance (EPA) introduced a 1:2 dilution step on all serum cortisol specimens in December 2021. Diluting the specimen, prior to the displacement step, markedly improved the recovery seen in neat specimens.
Methods: External quality assessment (EQA) specimens, with known concentrations of cortisol (established via liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS)), were used to examine the impact of automatic dilution on expected results, irrespective of gender. Serum EQA pools (8 males, 6 females, and 3 pregnant females) were analysed, in duplicate, neat and diluted (1:2), and compared with the LC-MS target concentrations. Patient specimens (106 males, 95 females, and 106 pregnant females) were analysed neat and diluted to assess any potential clinical impact of this change.
Results: Post-dilution step patient specimen recovery, compared to the neat result, for males, females and pregnant females was 108%, 110% and 116% respectively. Recovery was concentration-dependent, with little change seen in patient samples at cortisol concentrations <200 nmol/l.
EQA pools (n) | Results bias Neat | Results bias Dilution |
Male (8) | +0.5% | +8% |
Female (6) | -7% | +2% |
Pregnant Female (3) | -18% | -5% |
Combined EQA results (neat 56; dilution 25) | -15% (intercept +17 nmol/l) | +2% (no intercept) |
Conclusions: Introduction of an automatic dilution step to the Abbott Alinity immunoassay for serum cortisol analysis has corrected an inherent gender-related bias in the assay design. The concentration-dependence of the recovery ensures that patients at risk of adrenal insufficiency are investigated appropriately. Therefore, the change averts potential over-investigation, without compromising the clinical utility of the analysis.