Evaluation of cardiac troponin I stability in blood sample using the AccuTnI+3 assay
M. Nowoczyn, C. Lefevre, F. Grandhomme, J. Alexandre, S. Fradin, S. Allouche Department of Biochemistry, CHU de Caen, Caen, France. nowoczyn-m@chu-caen.fr
OBJECTIVE: Troponins are considered as the biomarkers of choice to highlight cardiac injury in emergency departments, but are also valuable to detect cardiac injury in a non-emergency setting. In this latter case, transport of blood samples to laboratories often exceeds the manufacturer’s recommendations (<2 h between vein puncture and analysis for the Beckman Coulter AccuTnI+3 assay). We aim to evaluate in vitro the stability of troponin Ic (cTnI) at two intervals (<2 h and at 4 h) over a wide range of concentrations using the Beckman Coulter AccuTnI+3 assay.
PATIENTS AND METHODS: For each of the 95 patients included in this study, we analyzed the first blood sample with a time of transport <2 h, and the second sample after 4 h from vein puncture. We then calculated the correlation between the two periods of analysis and evaluated the bias by a Bland-Altman test.
RESULTS: Taking into account of our analytical reproducibility, we did not observe any significant differences in cTnI values between <2 h and 4 h.
CONCLUSIONS: The time between vein puncture and analysis of cTnI can be extended to 4 h.
Free PDF DownloadThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
To cite this article
M. Nowoczyn, C. Lefevre, F. Grandhomme, J. Alexandre, S. Fradin, S. Allouche
Evaluation of cardiac troponin I stability in blood sample using the AccuTnI+3 assay
Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci
Year: 2017
Vol. 21 - N. 10
Pages: 2463-2466