Glycohemoglobin Assays Evaluated in a Large-Scale Quality-Control ...

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Jun 6, 1995 - quality-control survey on glycohemoglobin. (GHb), monitored in France by the. Soci#{233}t#{233}Fran#{231}aise de Biologie. Clinique.
CLIN.

CHEM.

41/11,

1644-1648

Glycohemoglobin Philippe

We

the

Dominique

results

Evaluated

Labb#{233},2Glues

of a national

glycohemoglobin

authority

of the

lyophilized

“Agence

hemolysate

du

in France

and

and

sent

utilization by clinicians (QC)

the

laboratories.

Results were obtained from 2770 laboratories. HbA1C, HbA1, and total GHb were measured by 50%, 24%, and 26% of the participants, respectively. Of these measurements, 79% of the HbA1C results and 76% of the total GHb results, but only 48% of the HbA1 results, were within the ± 20% limits of the indicated target values. Mean values for the hemolysate ranged from 8% to 11 % for

HbA1C,

from

13% for total 3% to 20%, used

according

GHb

for

ples,

7% to 12% for HbA1, GHb. The interlaboratory assay,

which

very

different

exhibit

Nonetheless, techniques

to

and from 11% to CV5 ranged from used. So, methods

method are

based

on various

analytical

this large-scale study indicates that can support transferability of results

laboratory

surveys

some from

to laboratory.

We report GHb assays

source

Terms:

comparison/variation,

Materials

QC material. The material used lyophilized hemolysate obtained

and

after 15 mm This material Before

its

of glycohemoglobin

major component index of metabolic

(GHb),

and

partic-

HbA1C, is considered a control in diabetes melli-

tus.3 GHb values are used as routine retrospective markers of glycemic status, reflecting diabetic balance of 4 to 8 weeks before blood collection (1). The optimal use of these biological markers in public health implies the use of reliable, well-controlled methods (2, 3). However, many techniques are used in clinical biology laboratories, some of them measuring all glycohemoglobins, other measuring specifically

or the bulk

of HbA1.

These

methods

are based

on

various principles that influence the analytical performances of the technique: ion-exchange chromatography, electrophoresis, immunology, and affinity chromatography (4). In the absence of reference methods and (or) reference materials for GHb, there may be a large discrepancy of results obtained from laboratory to laboratory. The only way to evaluate the respective analytical performances of the different methods and their actual ‘Laboratoire Central de Biochimie, H#{244}pital Robert Debr#{233}, CHU Reims, Avenue du G#{233}ndral Koenig, F-51092 Reims Cedex, France (address for correspondence). Fax 33.26.78.85.39. 2 Laboratoire de Biochimie A and Socidt#{233} Francaise de Biologie Clinique, H#{244}pital Necker-Enfants Malades, Paris, France. Nonstandard abbreviations: SFBC, Societe Francaise de Biologie Clinique; Hb, hemoglobin; GHb, glycohemoglobin; and QC, quality control. Received June 6, 1995; accepted August 4, 1995. 1644

CLINICAL

CHEMISTRY,

Vol. 41, No. 11, 1995

were

pool The

HbA1C and

concentration

to help

prevent

specific

materials

determined added of the

a

desired

were are

of a

having the

was

denaturation used

he-

portions

obtaining

lyoprotectants

donor before

erythrocyte

hemolysate until

a SA

with 0.5 foaming,

isolated

various

of erythrocyte

CryoThe

with

concentration,

HPLC. material

and

a normal

supplemented

targets.

bin.

washed

lyophilization,

was

was

processed as a patient’s sample. was prepared from multiple

which

HbA1C

for QC survey from Bio-Rad

France), to be reconstituted water, gently mixed without

concentrated

Measurement

HbAIC

and Methods

molysate

of

auspice Labora involve over th referenc pro

cedure.

high

ularly valuable

the results of a national QC survey o monitored in France by the Soci#{233}t#{233} Fran

erythrocytes,

diabetes/intermethod

quality-contro

#{231}aisede Biologie Clinique (SFBC), under the of the Agence du M#{233}dicament (Direction des toires et des Contr#{244}les). This large-scale study >2700 laboratories of clinical biology all country. Because of the lack of international method, this survey was run as an experimental

lysing.

Indexing

is to undertake

(5).

(Ivry-sur-Seine, mL of distilled

princi-

performances.

Survey

Vassault2

by

on behalf of the A sample of

to 3109

Anne

Quality-Control

survey

M#{233}dicament.”

was

Utilization

in a Large-Scale

Dumont,2

quality-control

(GHb), monitored Soci#{233}t#{233} Fran#{231}aise de Biologie Clinique on

Management

#{149}Laboratory

Assays

Gillery,’

report

(1995)

by to

the

hemoglo-

proprietary.

Before distribution, the technical characteristics o the QC material were verified to be suitable for use with the various methods of GHb determination (i.e., ion-exchange chromatography, electrophoresis, immunology, affinity techniques), as described in a previous study of the Glycated Proteins Committee of SFBC (6). A pathological value for GHb was chosen for this study, the expected HbA1C value, as determined by the HPLC separation method, being 10% of total Hb. Target values for the various glycated Hb subspecies were checked with different methods in reference laboratories (Table 1). In the absence of approved reference methods, we chose the values obtained by HPLC as indicative target values for the purpose of the study. The values obtained for HbA1C and HbA1 were respectively 10.0% and 11.0% of total Hb, whereas a target value for total GHb could not be determined because o

high case,

variability we decided

value

of

all

results

(11.7%). The stability checked, able control

to avoid to

transport material

between to use

the methods as the target

obtained

of QC

material

problems

during

the

during

storage

of interpretations

conditions. under

tested. In this value the mean

three

GHb different

QC

survey was

alse

attributwas

assayed conditions:

in on

Table

1. Setting

target

values

Mean

Method

truncation discarded the retained results, between were processed for further

for the QC material. SD

±

Manulacturer

Target

value

% of total Hb

HbAIC

Diamat

(Lab.

Bio-Rad

10.0

±

0.1

Bio-Rad

10.5

±

0.2

±

0.4

1)

HPLC Diamat (Lab.

2)

Immunological method (Tinaquant)

Boehringer Mannheim

9.8

Of the 3109 laboratories that received QC material, 2770 sent results (89% response). Each individual result was evaluated in comparison with (a) the indicated target value and (b) the peer-group method mean value. With respect to (a), the results of each laboratory were judged acceptable if within ± 20% of the target

11.0 Diamat

Total GHb Automatic affinity method (IMx) Affinity chromatography (glycaffin minicolumn) a

n

=

5 each.

b

Mean

value

Bio-Rad

11.0

±

0.3

Abbott

12.2

±

0.9

Eurobio (Isolab)

10.4

±

1.3

11.7”

value.

Only

tained results

results varied

Hb during

QC survey

(see text).

but

With

day

of reconstitution

(basal

conditions),

on

day

7

only

regard

2 shows

the

the

results

proved

method

and

anonymous personal number. An updated list of methods commercially available and currently in use was enclosed with the report form. Each technique used was identified with two characters: The first one indicated the principle of the method (e.g., cation-exchange chromatography); the second one was specific for the method. Results could be expressed as percentages of HbA1C, HbA1 or total GHb, according to the method used. Protocol of QC survey and data collection. A vial of QC material was sent by mail in July 1993 together with the QC survey form and technical information to

liquid

survey tory, result.

report

form

coding

of

The

form

the was

as

to

identification

method,

and

returned

by

of transcription mail

within

the

laboraof

the

5 days

to

the Agence du M#{233}dicament, where results were collected. Statistical calculations were performed by the SFBC center. Statistical calculations. The peer-group mean values were calculated from was complete information according to the following

the

results for which there about the method used, procedures: A nonparametric

obtained

the was

all

The

and

Many

or

were used

absence

of

eliminated. for

component

laboratories

Table

laboratories.

of results

2092.

acceptable. means,

of error

coding

number

were

method

because

analyte

1056

results,

from

unusable

calculations in

of HbAI peer-group

(or)

Eventually, HbA1C

48% to the

data

after reconstitution and storage at 4 #{176}C (extreme conditions of storage in the laboratory), and on the day of reconstitution of a lyophilized sample stored 7 days at 37 #{176}C (extreme conditions of transport duration and temperature). These storage conditions did not alter GHb values, as determined by HPLC, immunoassay, or affinity methods (data not shown). GHb survey form. A survey form was sent with the QC material. Each laboratory was identified by an

the 3109 participating laboratories. The participating laboratories were determined on the basis of the answer to a questionnaire investigating the actual measurement of GHb by each laboratory, sent during a previous QC survey. Each laboratory performed the GHb assay by its usual method and filled the QC

71.5% of participating laboratories obin this range. The number of acceptable according to the glycated component of 79% of HbA1C results and 76% of GHb

assayed:

results, obtained

of the mean The imprethe between-

Results

HbAI HPLC

outlying data. The and 0.975 fractiles, calculation: num-

ber of results, SD, and standard estimate (S), obtained after recurrent truncations, cision of the methods was defined as laboratory CV for each method.

10.0

HPLC

1% most the 0.025 statistical

statistical

measured

(50.4%

of

was

laboratories),

HbA1 in 501 laboratories (23.9%), and total GHb in 537 laboratories (25.7%). Various methods were used, principally for the HbA1C assays. Cation-exchange chromatography represented 57.8% of the methods used for determination of HbA1C (58% HPLC or low-pressure chromatography,

phoresis

3.1%,

mated sults)

affinity

method

29.0% or

measured or

its

columns

minicolumns), assays

(yielding

was

chromatography by

electrophoresis

by methods derivatives, (75.6%),

by

affinity

or

by

and

measured (63.5%

(36.5%).

based

electro-

10.1%,

calculated

HbA1

of methods.

cation-exchange ries)

42%

immunological

of

Total

on affinity

re-

either

by

laboratoGHb

was

for boronic

acid

chromatography automated

auto-

HbA1C

methods

on

mini-

(24.4%).

Chemical methods were not frequently used (n 11). The accuracy and the imprecision of the different methods used were highly variable, even for a single group of techniques based on the same principle (Fig. 1). For HbA1C assays, mean values ranged from 8% to 11% of total Hb, and CVs ranged from 2% to 18%. Among the methods involving cation-exchange chromatography, the automated methods, HPLC and lowpressure liquid chromatography (code 2), showed the best precision (CVs generally between 2% and 5%). The precision depended on the system, the difference of means obtained by different HPLC methods varying in a range of 20%. Minicolumns (codes CX) yielded generally results lower than the indicated target value, and showed a much greater imprecision, with CVs ranging from 12% to 19%. Results obtained with immunological methods (codes FIX) showed mean values close to the target value (±5%) and CVs ranging between 2% and 8%, whereas agarose gel electrophore=

CLINICAL

CHEMISTRY,

Vol. 41, No. 11, 1995

1645

Table

2. Results

from

all the participating

laboratories

for HbA1C,

HbA1,

and total

% of total Methoda

Code

n

Mean

SD

Median

GHb.

Hb 0.5 percentile

99.5 percentile

HbA1 Overall

mean

1442

Helena Hb glyquee Sebia HbA1 Electro Other

REP (1) (2)

electrophoresis

Menarini Ciba

HA 8110

Corning

Merck Bio-Rad Bio-Rad Other Eurobio

(7)

Clevenot

Abbott

(6)

system Hb

glyquee

(5)

IMx (8)

Other affinity chromatography Bio-Rad HbA,C macromethod Bio-Rad

HbA1C micromethod

Bio-Rad

HbA1 mini-col

Realef

Chembio

Helena

Hb glyquee

Fumouze

(6)

(6)

Glyco-Sep

A1

(9)

(1)

ion-exchange

Other

(6)

chromatography

A1 (10)

2000

Bayer-Ames

DCA

Boehringer

Tinaquant

Biotrol

(12)

Hb glycosylee

Unidentified

(11) A1

(9)

4.6

18.8

5.1

23.6

11.8

7.6 8.4

16.3

32 18

8.3 8.7

8.3

0.4

6.8

9.6

8.7

0.2

8.2

9.2

2H

17

7.7

7.5

0.7

2K 2M

84 81

10.1 9.9

10.1

0.3

7.0 9.2

10.0

0.4

8.9

2X

123

9.5

9.6

1.2

6.5

16.9

9.3 10.7

Al

46

13.1

13.0

2.4

6.7

11.1 10.9 18.8

AM AT

25 310

10.8 8.8

10.8

3.3

3.9

22.5

8.9

1.1

3.5

16.0

AX

26

9.9

9.3

2.8

5.0

16.1

CD CK

58 166

8.5

8.6

1.5

6.7

14.5

8.8

1.5

5.6

CO

11

8.8 8.7

8.6

0.8

7.7

20.0 10.1

CR CS

36 17

8.1 10.6

7.9 10.5

1.6

5.2

11.9

1.6

7.0

14.2

CX

45

8.6

43

6.8

2.0 1.9

1.1 4.2

13.6

CZ

8.6 6.9

HB

37

10.3

0.3

9.7

HO PF

62 ii

10.3 9.6

9.8 10.0

0.8 6.2

6.8 2.0

11.0

11.4 9.5

9.7

2.0

2.2

17.1

18.6

XX

technique

1.9 3.0 2.1 2.3

(4)

(5)

9.3 11.1

9.8

2D 2G

HPLC

9.2

10.9 12.1 9.7

34 13

(3)

Glycaffin

Merck

iS 1X

Diamat (6) modular system HPLC

35

system

Glycomat

Clevenot

1H

112

13.1 10.8 19.5

HbA1 592

9.7

10.1

2.6

3.7

62 112

11.4 12.3

11.3

1.5

7.1

16.3

12.2

2.2

4.5

20.0

1X 2X

14 56

12.3 10.2

12.1

10.7

2.1 1.6

7.7 3.2

15.5 12.6

(7)

Al

17

12.7

Boehringer A1 (12) Eurobio HbA1 rapides

CB

19

10.6

12.8 10.3

2.2 1.0

8.3 8.0

18.6 11.7

13.0

Overall

mean

Helena

Hb glyquee

Sebia HbA1 Electro Other electrophoresis HLPC systems Eurobio

Glycaffin

Other

1H

(2)

iS system

(7)

ion-exchange

Fumouze

chromatography

A1 (10)

Unidentified

Total

REP (1)

technique

CI

11

9.0

CX

41

9.9

9.3 10.0

1.5 1.8

7.5 6.8

CZ

202

7.2

7.2

1.4

3.7

12.7

XX

58

10.3

10.7

2.0

5.8

15.0

GHb

Overall

mean

Helena

Hb

Sebia

HbA,

Eurobio

2.5

4.5

22.2

11.6

11.6

2.3

5.4

17.0

(2)

iS

28

11.7

11.5

2.1

9.1

18.7

11(7)

AH Al

47 197

10.9 13.1

10.9

7.4 1.3

22.2

13.1

2.5 2.2

2H

127

11.1

11.1

2.0

4.7

23.0

AT AX

132 29

11.3 12.8

11.2

1.3

7.3

14.6

13.0

4.5 8.8

19.6

REP

Electro

Abbott

IMx

Other

affinity

Hb

Other

glyquee

(5)

(8) chromatography

Hb glyquee

Helena

(1)

(7)

Clevenot

Sigma

11.6

36

736

Glycaffin

Merck

11.7

1H

glyquee

Glycotest

Eurobio

totale

(13)

Hb glyqu#{233}e(1) ion-exchange

Fumouze

chromatography

A1 (10)

Unidentified a Addresses

technique of suppliers

Cergy-Pontoise,

(all in France)

(5) Nogent-sur-Marne,

corresponding (6) lvry-sur-Seine,

CLINICAL

CHEMISTRY,

22.0

A6

20

13.4

13.7

2.7 1.8

CS CX

11 15

9.1 10.3

9.2 10.0

1.7 2.3

7.4 6.8

13.3

CZ

33

7.3

7.2

1.5

4.5

11.2

XX

61

3.0

5.2

to the numbers (7) Les Ulis,

Fallavier.

1646

15.6

Vol. 41, No. 11, 1995

10.6 in parentheses:

(8) Rungis,

10.8 (1) Saint-Leu

(9) Paris,

Ia For#{234}t. (2) Issy-les-Moulineaux,

(10) Asni#{232}res,(ii)

Puteaux,

(12) Meylan,

15.5

13.9

23.0 (3) Chevilly-Larue, and

(13) Saint-Ouentin

(4)

Mean GHb(%

of total Hb)

A

14

B

C

#{149}

#{149}

12 #{149}

S

#{149}

10

#{149} S

#{149}‘

8

#{149}

#{149}#{149} #{149}

6

AT

2M 2K

20

of vanation

Coefficient

2H

cK

01

2(3

CD

HB 1H

2K HO

Cl

iS

CB

CZ

J

AT

1H

AH

AS AM

Fig. 1. Accuracy and imprecision of GHb assays: mean values (A, B, C) and CVs (D, E, F) for the various methods evaluating HbA1C (A, D), HbA1 (B, E), and total GHb (C, F).

(%)

20

16

The horizontal lines represent the target values. The methods are identified as in Table 2. Al, AH, AM, and A6 (C, F) are affinity methods (minicolumns); AT (A, C, 0, F) is an affinity method (automated); 2K, 2M, 20, and 2H (A, B, 0, E) are HPLC ion-exchange methods; 2G (A, 0) is a low-pressure ion-exchange liquid chromatographic method; CK, CD, CR, CB, Cl, and CZ (A, B, 0. E) are ion-exchange chromatographic minicolumns; 1H and iS (A, B, 0, E) are electro-

12 8. 4.

0. CK

AT2M2H

2K

20

20

CD

CRHB 1H

2K

ce

HO

a

a

is

P

AT

1H

AH

(code 1H) gave higher mean values and CVs (13%). The results of calculated HbA1C obtained by an automated affinity technique (code AT) gave a mean value 10% lower than that obtained by HPLC or immunology, with a CV of 10%. HbA1 assays were characterized by a high number of unacceptable results: Only 48% were within ± 20% of the target value. After elimination of the extreme aberrant values, electrophoretic methods (codes 1X) had mean values near target value but CVs >15%. Results obtained with minicolumns (codes CX) varied according to the kit; they were characterized by high CVs (20%) and, for technique CZ, a very low mean value. All GHb assays were based on the same principle of

text,

affinity.

conditions

sis

and

Their were

obtained

mean

values

compatible by

the

ranged

with

specific

the automated method umns (13% to 18%).

the

methods.

AT

from

11%

HbA1C CVs

(11%)

to

mean were

than

lower

with

13.5% values with

minicol-

46

the

large

far,

Thus materials lack

of the

disease.

The

availability

generated long-term of reliable

by diabetes complications assay

methods

for measuring biological markers of diabetes is of major importance, because these assays allow diabetologists to better monitor the glycemic balance of their patients, thus delaying the onset of complications. Since the introduction of the first chromatographic methods into clinical laboratories -20 years ago, many techniques have been developed, based on various principles and equipment. This report provides an overview of the actual situation in July 1993. Moreover, the principle of the methods used affected the glycated Hb components actually assayed. In this con-

general

agreement for

of standardization,

materials, The

only

an

way

of their

quality The

major

results

obtained

matter

of fact,

the

of

lower

scale,

our

study,

the but

of the

isfactory

ries, The

those

results

for

the

pointed

out

obtained

by

during

The ferent

the as

analytical

methods

huge

such

better

particularly incompatible

clinical

use

CLINICAL

a In

only

the

a particular

to

the

effective

provide

in many

unsat-

laboratois a critical

methods which by

generates biologists,

of aberrant

operated

as

answers

exhibit

Obviously, precision

minicolumns

imprecision

its

case at

study.

techniques,

and

the

not to

can

number

performances. as

a

routine

not

include

attributable

routinely

provide

niques

As

the

laboratories.

comprehension

this

methods

is

of results,

of method

to report

undertaken

linked

transferability

a confusion

in

are

if it is not sufficiently robust. large number of available

factor

was

which

Any technique implemented

when

the

surveys.

measured

obtained

technique.

re-

and

of laboratories.

intrinsically also

QC

specialized

results

of variation

of

used

study

surveys between

calibration

dispersion

laboratory,

e.g.,

The

the

methods

present

was

on reference

for

number

GHb

any

interlaboratory

exists

is to perform of the

value

measurements.

the

in a large

when

for

unavoidable

results

between

determination monitoring blood

HbA1C

GHb

to control

interest

(A, 0) are

HO

found

particularly

induces

sults.

and

semiological

though index

techniques

no and

HB

results

effective

of some GHb assays, even is considered the reference glucose equilibrium (7).

use

problems of public health are associated with the

of the

and

methods.

variability

decreases

technique,

The meffitus

methods;

immunological

laboratories

factors

Discussion

phoresis

frJ

than

or the with

(3, 8). We CHEMISTRY,

very

manual

tech-

electrophoresis.

HbA1 the

suggest

Some

methods, goals

dif-

automated

show of the

that

an

method

techniques

Vol. 41, No. 11, 1995

1647

evaluating any

HbA1

more,

as

because

a whole (a)

should

their

not

general

be

performed

performances

HbA1 fraction. On the basis of the results obtained, however, some of methods evaluated in this study seem able to support transferability of results from laboratory to laboratory. Confirmation of the present results by future

but

rather

a target

based

value

the results obtained by HPLC and confirmed with different available methods. The choice of HPLC values was dictated by the fact that HPLC techniques allow the specific evaluation of HbA1 and are considered good candidates for reference techniques (4, 5, 9). However, each result was compared not only with the HPLC target value but also with the peer-group method mean calculated for every group of techniques, provided the method used was correctly identified on the survey form. Mean values in this study were widely dispersed, even in a single group of techniques, such as HPLC. This betweenmethod

dispersion

cannot

be

substantially

improved

un-

til an international standardization of GHb assays is achieved. As a temporary solution, a systematic calibration of techniques by convenient materials could be used (9-12). This is supported by the fact that methods based on very different principles, such as HPLC and immunology for HbA1C assays, provide comparable results if the immunological method is calibrated with a HPLC-titrated that

calibrator.

HbA1C calibration

Moreover,

of the

methods

others

have

improves

study

was

showed methods, (6).

not

exactly

comparable

interlaboratory

in particular

Moreover,

experimental

the

CLINICAL

to

the

in same

material

conditions

and mailing). Nevertheless, ferred to fresh biological particularly for accuracy Finally, this study (15) 1648

different properties from explain some differences the material used in this

identical behavior

CHEMISTRY,

patients’

samples,

several

of the

(high

well number

conclusions

samples studies. confirms

without the

it

various

chromatographic was

pattern

adapted

to

of

participants

cannot

be

our

trans-

modification, absolute

Vol. 41, No. 11, 1995

we

neces-

of

here,

techniques,

as

statistical

and

for

recommend only

or

that

in

should

well

as

general

good

not

GHb

assays

technical

be

and

should financial

performed.

This work was monitored by SFBC on behalf of the authority of the Agence du M#{233}dicament (Direction des Laboratoires et des Contr#{244}les) and was made possible by complementary grants of Bioforma. We thank A. Nicolas for technical assistance and S. Etienne

for

typing

the

manuscript.

References 1. Larsen ML, H#{248}rder M, Mogensen monitoring of glycosylated hemoglobin dent diabetes mellitus. N Engl J Med 2. Goldstein DE, Little RR, Wiedmeyer ing CL, Wilke AL. Is glycohemoglobin mellitus? Lessons from the diabetes trial. Clin Chem 1994;40:1637-40. 3. Kolatkar

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on

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studies,

general

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intensive

an

large-scale

not satisfactory; (b) the principles used for HbA1 also allow HbA1C measurements; and (c) they constitute a factor of confusion for clinicians. Furthermore, HbA1C is generally considered as the reference marker and is less subject to interferences than is the heterogeneous

control

of

sity are

laboratory:

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years

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U,

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T. Determination Clin Lab 1993;