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Abstract |
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Bone turnover is assessed indirectly by measurement of biochemical markers of bone turnover. Osteocalcin, a 49-amino-acid protein is a major noncollagenous protein of bone matrix, synthesized by osteoblasts and odontoblasts. Various assays exist for assessment of osteocalcin and concentrations in the same serum or plasma sample may vary enormously. The used antibodies may recognize intact osteocalcin and/or circulating fragments of osteocalcin. We here describe and validate a new automated immunoassay system for measurement of intact osteocalcin (DPC IMMULITE assay) using monoclonal antibodies (mouse) against the C-terminus of osteocalcin (AA 44 - 49). For detection polyclonal antibodies (goat) directed against the N-terminus (AA 1 - 17) conjugated with alkaline phosphatase are used. While different laboratory assays show marked clinical discordance, we evaluated our results comparatively to an established IRMA method (Nichols). We observed a highly significant correlation between both assays (r = 0.9352, p < 0.0001, n = 286) for healthy persons and also for patient samples (osteoporosis, diabetes type 1, rheumatoid arthritis). Very low inter- and intraassay covariance as well as highly significant linearity (analytical recovery near 100%) tested by serial dilutions were demonstrated for the DPC IMMULITE intact osteocalcin assay. We conclude that the IMMULITE assay is a useful method for assessment of intact osteocalcin giving valuable results in comparison to an established non-automated assay. |