Challenges in the diagnosis of hypervitaminemia B12. Interference by immunocomplexes

•Hypervitaminemia B12 is a common finding in clinical practice.•PEG precipitation is a useful screening method in ruling out macromolecules.•The presence of B12-immunocomplexes is a phenomenon barely known by physicians.•A algorithm for the screening of macroB12 interferences is highly cost-effectiv...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inClinica chimica acta Vol. 541; p. 117267
Main Authors Delgado, Jose Antonio, Pastor García, María I., Jiménez, Nuria Márquez, Petit, Gemma Costa, Pablo Cànaves, Josep A., Robles, Juan, Bauça, Josep Miquel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 15.02.2023
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:•Hypervitaminemia B12 is a common finding in clinical practice.•PEG precipitation is a useful screening method in ruling out macromolecules.•The presence of B12-immunocomplexes is a phenomenon barely known by physicians.•A algorithm for the screening of macroB12 interferences is highly cost-effective. High vitamin B12 concentrations are considered a common finding in clinical practice. Thanks to immunoassay accessibility, vitamin B12 has become a usual test in routine health checkups. However, these analytical methods usually present antibody-mediated interferences. Our aim was to propose an algorithm for the screening of antibody-mediated analytical interferences on vitamin B12 immunoassays on the Alinity platform. Observational, prospective, case-control study was performed during 12 months. Individuals with persistently elevated cobalamin concentrations [>554 pmol/L] were considered as cases in the absence of supplementation or other justifying cause. Individuals under treatment with vitamin B12, or in the context of alcoholism were included as controls. A thorough interference study by macromolecules in immunoassays was performed in serum samples: PEG precipitation, rheumatoid factor, heterophile antibodies and gel permeation chromatography (GPC). Albumin, total B12, IgG and IgM were measured in every GPC collected fraction and chromatograms were drafted. Up to 45% of cases presented interference by B12-immunocomplexes and the precipitation for all of them was >50%. The individual with the lowest interfered vitamin B12 result was 661 pmol/L. The presence of antibody-mediated interferences, mainly B12-immunocomplexes, is a relatively common phenomenon. A simple algorithm for the screening of interferences is useful and reliable in ruling out healthy individuals and highly cost-effective.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ObjectType-Undefined-3
ISSN:0009-8981
1873-3492
DOI:10.1016/j.cca.2023.117267