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Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory Immunology, 11 1996, 689-700, Vol 3, No. 6
F Lynn, GF Reed and BD Meade
Acellular pertussis vaccines are being evaluated in multiple clinical
studies, and human immunogenicity data will likely be pivotal in the
appraisal of vaccine responses between populations and the responses to
different vaccine combinations. Antibody response to pertussis antigens is
also used in the diagnosis of pertussis. An international study was
designed to assess the comparability of data generated in different
laboratories by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs). Thirty- three
participating laboratories were asked to quantitate specific antibody to
pertussis toxin (PT), filamentous hemagglutinin (FHA), pertactin (PRN), or
fimbrial proteins (FIM) in 21 samples. Samples were to be assayed in
triplicate in five independent assays by each ELISA routinely performed in
the laboratory to assess intra-assay, interassay, and population
variability. The mean sample values were used to compare quantitative
results among the laboratories. Thirteen of the 32 laboratories which
submitted evaluable data for an assay to measure antibodies to PT, 12 of 30
laboratories with assays for FHA, 10 of 17 laboratories with assays for
PRN, and 6 of 13 laboratories with assays for FIM maintained a coefficient
of variation below 20% for 75% of the samples tested. Assays that measure
antibodies to FIM appear to be less precise than the other assays.
Precision varied among laboratories that used similar methods. The relative
values of intra- and interassay variabilities were not consistent for a
given assay within a laboratory, indicating that the sources of these
variability components may be unrelated. Precision and agreement appeared
less reliable for samples with low antibody levels. Ranking and regression
analyses suggest that some laboratories generated comparable quantitative
results, although direct comparison or combination of results from
different laboratories remains difficult to support. Calibration to the
U.S. Reference Pertussis Antisera appears to have been successful at
standardizing the results in some laboratories. Statistical analyses are
affected by assay precision and are not necessarily reliable sole
predictors of biologically relevant differences in quantitative results. If
results from different laboratories must be compared, appropriate studies
of precision and quantitative agreement should be conducted to support the
specific comparisons.
Copyright © 1996 by the American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Collaborative study for the evaluation of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays used to measure human antibodies to Bordetella pertussis antigens
Laboratory of Pertussis, Food and Drug Administration, Rockville, Maryland 20852, USA. lynn@a1.cber.fda.gov.
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