Practical Laboratory Medicine (Aug 2024)

Analytical performances of a novel fluorescent immunoassay of anti-Müllerian hormone and establishment of the reference intervals in Chinese children

  • Li Li,
  • Mingyi Li,
  • Wenqian Zhu,
  • Lisong Shen,
  • Limin Jiang

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 41
p. e00419

Abstract

Read online

Background: AMH is important in child growth and the concentrations change with age and gender. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of the Pylon AMH assays and establish pediatric reference intervals. Methods: The experiments on imprecision, sensitivity, linearity, reportable range, interference and comparison were carried out to evaluate the analytical performance. The AMH reference ranges were calculated in 238 females and 346 males aged 0–18 years using robust methods. Results: The repeatability and the within-laboratory imprecision CVs of the assay were 3.7 % and 6.4 % at 2.25 ng/mL, and 4.6 % and 6.4 % at 15.49 ng/mL, respectively. The sensitivity (LoB = 0.05 ng/mL, LoD = 0.1 ng/mL and LoQ = 0.3 ng/mL) was verified. The linearity was 0.1–19.55 ng/mL and report up to 391 ng/mL with 20x pre-dilution. There was no significant interference from hemoglobin (500 mg/dL), triglyceride (500 mg/dL), bilirubin (10 mg/dL), cholesterol (800 mg/dL) and biotin (3000 ng/mL). The AMH measured by the Pylon assays correlated to those measured by the Elecsys assays. In males, the AMH levels were high at birth (0 d-1 m: median 95.10 ng/mL) and increased to a peak (7 m-1y: median 158.80 ng/mL) before they decreased with age (15–18 y: median 6.31 ng/mL). In females, the AMH concentrations were low at birth (0 d-1 m: median 0.20 ng/mL) and increased with age (15–18 y: median 3.03 ng/mL). Conclusion: The Pylon AMH assays showed good analytical performance and the AMH reference intervals in chinese children determined may provide a basis in clinical diagnosis and treatment of related diseases.

Keywords