Report from the HarmoSter study impact of calibration on comparability of LC-MS/MS measurement of circulating cortisol, 17OH-progesterone and aldosterone

Open Access
Authors
  • F. Fanelli
  • M. Cantù
  • A. Temchenko
  • M. Mezzullo
  • J.M. Lindner
  • M. Peitzsch
  • J.M. Hawley
  • S. Bruce
  • P.-A. Binz
  • M.T. Ackermans
  • A.C. Heijboer
  • J. Van den Ouweland
  • D. Koeppl
  • E. Nardi
  • F. Mackenzie
  • M. Rauh
  • G. Eisenhofer
  • B.G. Keevil
  • M. Vogeser
  • U. Pagotto
Publication date 04-04-2022
Journal Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine
Volume | Issue number 60 | 5
Pages (from-to) 726-739
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Van 't Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS)
Abstract
Objectives: Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) is recommended for measuring circulating steroids. However, assays display technical heterogeneity. So far, reproducibility of corticosteroid LC-MS/MS measurements has received scant attention. The aim of the study was to compare LC-MS/MS measurements of cortisol, 17OH-progesterone and aldosterone from nine European centers and assess performance according to external quality assessment (EQA) materials and calibration. Methods: Seventy-eight patient samples, EQA materials and two commercial calibration sets were measured twice by laboratory-specific procedures.
Results were obtained by in-house (CAL1) and external calibrations (CAL2 and CAL3). We evaluated intra and inter-laboratory imprecision, correlation and agreement in patient samples, and trueness, bias and commutability in EQA materials. Results: Using CAL1, intra-laboratory CVs ranged between 2.8-7.4%, 4.4-18.0% and 5.2-22.2%, for cortisol, 17OH-progesterone and aldosterone, respectively. Trueness and bias in EQA materials were mostly acceptable, however, inappropriate commutability and target value assignment were highlighted in some cases. CAL2 showed suboptimal accuracy. Median inter-laboratory CVs for cortisol, 17OH-progesterone and aldosterone were 4.9, 11.8 and 13.8% with CAL1 and 3.6, 10.3 and 8.6% with CAL3 (all pConclusions: Intra-laboratory imprecision and performance with EQA materials were variable. Inter-laboratory performance was mostly within specifications. Although residual variability persists, adopting common traceable calibrators and RMP-determined EQA materials is beneficial for standardization of LC-MS/MS steroid measurements.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1515/cclm-2021-1028
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85126019734
Downloads
Report from the HarmoSter study (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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