The Royal London Hospital Haemophilia Centre, Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, QMUL, London, UK.
Katharine Dormandy Haemophilia Centre and Thrombosis Unit, Royal Free Hospital, London, UK.
Haemophilia. 2021 May;27(3):490-499. doi: 10.1111/hae.14158. Epub 2021 Mar 2.
Inhibitor formation is the greatest challenge facing persons with haemophilia treated with factor concentrates. The gold standard testing methodologies are the Nijmegen-Bethesda assay (NBA) for FVIII and Bethesda assay (BA) for FIX inhibitors, which are affected by pre-analytical and inter-laboratory variability.
To evaluate inhibitor testing methodology and assess correlation between self-reported and actual methodology.
Methodology was evaluated using a survey distributed alongside a UK National External Quality Assessment Service Blood Coagulation external quality assurance (EQA) exercise for FVIII and FIX inhibitor testing.
Seventy four survey and EQA exercise responses were received (response rate 63.2%), with 50 paired survey/EQA results. 47.1% (33/70) reported using the NBA and 42.9% (30/70) the BA for FVIII inhibitor testing. Review of FVIII inhibitor assay methodology demonstrated discrepancy (self-reported to actual) in 64.3% (BA reporting) and 27.6% (NBA reporting). Pre-analytical heat treatment was used by 32.4%, most commonly 56°C for 30 minutes. Assay cut-offs of 0.1-1.0 BU/mL were reported. EQA samples (acquired FVIII and congenital FIX) demonstrated titres and coefficients of variation (CV) of 3.1 BU/mL (0.7-15.4 BU/mL; CV = 43%) and 18.0 BU/mL (0-117 BU/mL; CV = 33%), respectively. No significant assay or laboratory factors were found to explain this variance, which could have resulted in change in management for 6 patients (5 misclassified high-titre FVIII inhibitors and 1 false negative for a FIX inhibitor).
Heterogeneity was seen at each stage of assay methodology. No assay-related factors were found to explain variation in inhibitor titres. Further standardization is required to improve inhibitor quantification to guide patient care.
抑制物形成是接受因子浓缩物治疗的血友病患者面临的最大挑战。用于 FVIII 和 FIX 抑制剂抑制物检测的金标准检测方法是 Nijmegen-Bethesda assay(NBA)和 Bethesda assay(BA),但这些方法受到分析前和实验室间变异性的影响。
评估抑制物检测方法,并评估自我报告和实际方法之间的相关性。
通过与英国国家凝血外部质量评估服务(EQA)VIII 和 FIX 抑制剂检测外部质量评估(EQA)同时进行的一项调查评估方法学。
收到了 74 份调查和 EQA 回复(回复率为 63.2%),其中 50 份调查/EQA 结果配对。50 份报告中有 47.1%(33/70)报告使用 NBA,42.9%(30/70)报告使用 BA 进行 FVIII 抑制剂检测。FVIII 抑制剂检测方法的回顾显示(BA 报告)64.3%(NBA 报告)和 27.6%存在差异。有 32.4%的人使用了分析前热处理,最常见的是 56°C 30 分钟。报告的检测截止值为 0.1-1.0 BU/mL。EQA 样本(获得的 FVIII 和先天性 FIX)的效价和变异系数(CV)分别为 3.1 BU/mL(0.7-15.4 BU/mL;CV=43%)和 18.0 BU/mL(0-117 BU/mL;CV=33%)。没有发现显著的检测或实验室因素可以解释这种差异,这可能导致 6 名患者的治疗方案发生改变(5 名高滴度 FVIII 抑制剂患者分类错误,1 名 FIX 抑制剂患者检测结果为假阴性)。
在检测方法的各个阶段都存在异质性。没有发现与检测相关的因素可以解释抑制物效价的变化。需要进一步标准化以提高抑制剂定量检测水平,从而指导患者治疗。