PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Pre-Analytical Parameters Affecting Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Measurement in Plasma: Identifying Confounders.

  • Johanna M Walz,
  • Daniel Boehringer,
  • Heidrun L Deissler,
  • Lothar Faerber,
  • Jens C Goepfert,
  • Peter Heiduschka,
  • Susannah M Kleeberger,
  • Alexa Klettner,
  • Tim U Krohne,
  • Nicole Schneiderhan-Marra,
  • Focke Ziemssen,
  • Andreas Stahl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0145375
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. e0145375

Abstract

Read online

BACKGROUND:Vascular endothelial growth factor-A (VEGF-A) is intensively investigated in various medical fields. However, comparing VEGF-A measurements is difficult because sample acquisition and pre-analytic procedures differ between studies. We therefore investigated which variables act as confounders of VEGF-A measurements. METHODS:Following a standardized protocol, blood was taken at three clinical sites from six healthy participants (one male and one female participant at each center) twice one week apart. The following pre-analytical parameters were varied in order to analyze their impact on VEGF-A measurements: analyzing center, anticoagulant (EDTA vs. PECT / CTAD), cannula (butterfly vs. neonatal), type of centrifuge (swing-out vs. fixed-angle), time before and after centrifugation, filling level (completely filled vs. half-filled tubes) and analyzing method (ELISA vs. multiplex bead array). Additionally, intrapersonal variations over time and sex differences were explored. Statistical analysis was performed using a linear regression model. RESULTS:The following parameters were identified as statistically significant independent confounders of VEGF-A measurements: analyzing center, anticoagulant, centrifuge, analyzing method and sex of the proband. The following parameters were no significant confounders in our data set: intrapersonal variation over one week, cannula, time before and after centrifugation and filling level of collection tubes. CONCLUSION:VEGF-A measurement results can be affected significantly by the identified pre-analytical parameters. We recommend the use of CTAD anticoagulant, a standardized type of centrifuge and one central laboratory using the same analyzing method for all samples.