Microbiology Spectrum (Oct 2024)
Effect of concentration, temperature, and time on the stability of hepatitis C virus nucleic acid in serum
Abstract
ABSTRACT To explore the influence of storage temperature and time on the stability of different concentrations of hepatitis C virus nucleic acid (HCV RNA) samples and to provide data reference for laboratory quality control. Serum samples of 10 patients with HCV RNA detection quantitation of 106–108 IU/mL were collected. The samples of each patient were diluted into three concentrations: high, medium, and low. Then the samples of each concentration were divided into 21, which were divided into three groups according to the storage conditions of −20°C, 4°C, and 25°C, with seven samples in each group. The samples were selected from each group for quantitative detection of HCV RNA on day 0, day 1, day 3, day 5, day 7, day 14, and day 30. The results of each concentration and storage temperature sample remained stable within 5 days. Based on the mixed-effect linear model, the main effects of temperature, time, and concentration were statistically significant (P < 0.01). There was an interaction effect between concentration and time (P = 0.0448), and there was also an interaction effect between temperature and time (P < 0.01). There was no interaction effect between concentration and temperature (P = 0.11) or between concentration, temperature, and time (P = 0.90). The results of serum samples with different concentrations of the HCV RNA remained stable within 5 days. The lower the initial concentration of HCV RNA serum sample, the worse the stability; the higher the storage temperature, the worse the stability. If conditions permit, the laboratory should store such samples at −20°C.IMPORTANCEPreviously, there were few reports about the influence of different concentrations of sample nucleic acid on the stability of samples at various temperatures and times in various literatures. Therefore, it is necessary to analyze the influence of concentration factors on the stability of samples and test results at different storage times and temperatures. This study took the concentration of hepatitis C virus nucleic acid as the research object to further understand the stability of hepatitis C virus nucleic acid test samples under various storage conditions, to provide data reference for the treatment of hepatitis C virus nucleic acid and RNA test samples before clinical laboratory test, and provide guidance and help for the improvement of laboratory quality control.
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