A novel serum calprotectin (MRP8/14) particle-enhanced immuno-turbidimetric assay (sCAL turbo) helps to differentiate systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis from other diseases in routine clinical laboratory settings
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/32452Date
2023-10-25Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Foell, Dirk; Saers, Melanie; Park, Carolin; Brix, Ninna; Glerup, Mia; Kessel, Christoph; Wittkowski, Helmut; Hinze, Claas; Berntson, Lillemor; Fasth, Anders; Myrup, Charlotte; Nordal, Ellen Berit; Rygg, Marite; Hasle, Henrik; Albertsen, Birgitte Klug; Herlin, Troels; Holzinger, Dirk; Niederberger, Christian; Schlüter, BernhardAbstract
Methods To evaluate the accuracy in identifying children with SJIA, the performance of a particle-enhanced immuno-turbidimetric assay for serum calprotectin (sCAL turbo) on an automated laboratory instrument was analyzed. Samples from 615 children were available with the diagnoses SJIA (n=99), non-systemic JIA (n=169), infections (n=51), other infammatory diseases (n=126), and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL, n=147). In addition, samples from 23 healthy controls were included.
Results The sCAL turbo assay correlated well with the MRP8/14 ELISA used in previous validation studies (r=0.99, p<0.001). It could reliably differentiate SJIA from all other diagnoses with signifcant accuracy (cutof at 10,500 ng/ml, sensitivity 84%, specifcity 94%, ROC area under curve 0.960, p<0.001).
Conclusions Serum calprotectin analyses are a helpful tool supporting the diagnosis of SJIA in children with prolonged fever or inflammatory disease. Here, we show that an immuno-turbidimetric assay for detection of serum calprotectin on an automated laboratory instrument can be implemented in clinical laboratory settings to facilitate its use as a diagnostic routine test in clinical practice.