Krasowski Matthew D, Pizon Anthony F, Siam Mohamed G, Giannoutsos Spiros, Iyer Manisha, Ekins Sean
Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, USA.
BMC Emerg Med. 2009 Apr 28;9:5. doi: 10.1186/1471-227X-9-5.
Laboratory tests for routine drug of abuse and toxicology (DOA/Tox) screening, often used in emergency medicine, generally utilize antibody-based tests (immunoassays) to detect classes of drugs such as amphetamines, barbiturates, benzodiazepines, opiates, and tricyclic antidepressants, or individual drugs such as cocaine, methadone, and phencyclidine. A key factor in assay sensitivity and specificity is the drugs or drug metabolites that were used as antigenic targets to generate the assay antibodies. All DOA/Tox screening immunoassays can be limited by false positives caused by cross-reactivity from structurally related compounds. For immunoassays targeted at a particular class of drugs, there can also be false negatives if there is failure to detect some drugs or their metabolites within that class.
Molecular similarity analysis, a computational method commonly used in drug discovery, was used to calculate structural similarity of a wide range of clinically relevant compounds (prescription and over-the-counter medications, illicit drugs, and clinically significant metabolites) to the target ('antigenic') molecules of DOA/Tox screening tests. These results were compared with cross-reactivity data in the package inserts of immunoassays marketed for clinical testing. The causes for false positives for phencyclidine and tricyclic antidepressant screening immunoassays were investigated at the authors' medical center using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry as a confirmatory method.
The results illustrate three major challenges for routine DOA/Tox screening immunoassays used in emergency medicine. First, for some classes of drugs, the structural diversity of common drugs within each class has been increasing, thereby making it difficult for a single assay to detect all compounds without compromising specificity. Second, for some screening assays, common 'out-of-class' drugs may be structurally similar to the target compound so that they account for a high frequency of false positives. Illustrating this point, at the authors' medical center, the majority of positive screening results for phencyclidine and tricyclic antidepressants assays were explained by out-of-class drugs. Third, different manufacturers have adopted varying approaches to marketed immunoassays, leading to substantial inter-assay variability.
The expanding structural diversity of drugs presents a difficult challenge for routine DOA/Tox screening that limit the clinical utility of these tests in the emergency medicine setting.
常用于急诊医学的常规药物滥用和毒理学(DOA/Tox)筛查实验室检测,通常采用基于抗体的检测方法(免疫测定法)来检测苯丙胺类、巴比妥类、苯二氮䓬类、阿片类和三环类抗抑郁药等药物类别,或可卡因、美沙酮和苯环利定等个别药物。检测灵敏度和特异性的一个关键因素是用作抗原靶点以产生检测抗体的药物或药物代谢物。所有DOA/Tox筛查免疫测定法都可能受到结构相关化合物交叉反应导致的假阳性的限制。对于针对特定药物类别的免疫测定法,如果未能检测到该类别中的某些药物或其代谢物,也可能出现假阴性。
分子相似性分析是药物研发中常用的一种计算方法,用于计算多种临床相关化合物(处方药和非处方药、非法药物以及具有临床意义的代谢物)与DOA/Tox筛查检测的目标(“抗原”)分子的结构相似性。将这些结果与用于临床检测的市售免疫测定法包装说明书中的交叉反应数据进行比较。在作者所在的医疗中心,使用气相色谱/质谱法作为确证方法,对苯环利定和三环类抗抑郁药筛查免疫测定法出现假阳性的原因进行了调查。
结果表明了急诊医学中使用的常规DOA/Tox筛查免疫测定法面临的三个主要挑战。首先,对于某些药物类别,每类常见药物的结构多样性一直在增加,因此单一检测方法很难在不影响特异性的情况下检测到所有化合物。其次,对于某些筛查检测,常见的“类别外”药物可能在结构上与目标化合物相似,从而导致假阳性频率较高。在作者所在的医疗中心,苯环利定和三环类抗抑郁药检测的大多数阳性筛查结果是由类别外药物引起的,这说明了这一点。第三,不同制造商对市售免疫测定法采用了不同的方法,导致检测之间存在很大差异。
药物结构多样性的不断增加给常规DOA/Tox筛查带来了严峻挑战,限制了这些检测在急诊医学环境中的临床应用。