Hamwi Ahmad, Endler Georg, Rubi Karl, Wagner Oswald, Endler Arno Thomas
Department of Laboratory Medicine, University of Vienna, Austria.
Clin Chem Lab Med. 2002 Apr;40(4):365-70. doi: 10.1515/CCLM.2002.059.
Reference values for Ferritin Flex on the Dimension RxL analyzer calibrated against the 3rd International Standard for Ferritin (recombinant) and N-Latex Ferritin on the BNA II nephelometer calibrated against the 2nd International Standard for Ferritin (spleen) both from Dade Behring (Marburg, Germany) were established (77 men and 182 women). Exclusion criteria were iron deficiency or iron deficiency anemia, inflammation, liver disease, malignancy, and other hematological or chronic disorders. The reference values (5.0th-95th percentiles) were as follow: for N-Latex Ferritin - men, 12-399 microg/l; women <50 years, 11-102 microg/l and women > or =50 years, 17-219 microg/l; for Ferritin Flex - men, 14-415 microg/l; women <50 years, 11-111 microg/l and women > or =50 years, 22-224 microg/l. Both assays correlated very closely with each other (r=0.993). The linearity was acceptable down to 2 microg/l for the Ferritin Flex method, but only down to 15 microg/l for the N-Latex Ferritin assay. The mean recovery of the 3rd International Standard by N-Latex Ferritin and Ferritin Flex was comparable (approximately 80%). We conclude that the new Ferritin Flex assay, which is based on the new 3rd International Standard, should be used for ferritin measurement in the routine medical laboratories in the future.