Practical Laboratory Medicine (May 2019)

Analytical performance of a single epitope B-type natriuretic peptide sandwich immunoassay on the Minicare platform for point-of-care diagnostics

  • Alexander van Reenen,
  • Mario Berger,
  • Emmanuel Moreau,
  • Edwin Bekx,
  • Tom Bruinink,
  • Danielle Kemper,
  • Lian van Lippen,
  • Jos Weusten,
  • Anita Mrakovic,
  • Etienne Michielsen,
  • Joost Vissers,
  • Femke de Theije,
  • Jeroen Nieuwenhuis,
  • Veronique Semjonow,
  • Johannes Mair

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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Point-of-care B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) testing with adequate analytical performance has the potential to improve patient flow and provide primary care givers with easy-to-use advanced diagnostic tools in the management of heart failure. We present the analytical evaluation of the Minicare BNP immunoassay under development on the Minicare I-20 platform for point-of-care testing. Analytical performance was evaluated using EDTA venous whole blood, EDTA plasma and capillary whole blood. Method comparison with a lab-testing system was performed using samples from 187 patients. Normal values were determined based on 160 healthy adults, aging from 19 to 70 years. Limit of blank (LoB), limit of detection (LoD) were determined to be 3.3 ng/L, 5.8 ng/L. Limit of quantitation (LoQ) in whole blood at 20% and 10% coefficient of variation (CV) was found < 9 ng/L and <30 ng/L respectively without significant differences between EDTA whole blood and EDTA plasma. Total CV was found to be from 6.7% to 9.7% for BNP concentrations between 92.6 and 3984 ng/L. The sample type comparison study demonstrated correlation coefficients between 0.97 and 0.99 with slopes between 1.03 and 1.09 between the different samples. Method comparison between Minicare BNP and Siemens ADVIA Centaur BNP demonstrated a correlation coefficient of 0.92 with a slope of 1.06. The 97.5% URL of a healthy population was calculated to be 72.6 ng/L. The Minicare BNP assay is a robust, easy-to-use and sensitive test for rapid determination of BNP concentrations that can be used in a near-patient setting. Keywords: Heart failure, Diagnosis, B-type natriuretic peptide, Point-of-care, Capillary blood, Analytical performance