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Technical Note: Comparison of Alinity c Hemoglobin A1c Immunoassay with Premier Hb9210 Automated HPLC Assay: A Preliminary Report.
Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science 2024 January
OBJECTIVE: We utilized Premier Hb9210 analyzer (HPLC method; Trinity Biotech, Jamestown, NY) for measuring HBA1c in whole blood. As our laboratory is transitioning to Abbott system, we compared HbA1c values obtained by Alinity c and Premier Hb9210.
METHODS: The Premier Hb9210 analyzer is based on boronate affinity high performance liquid chromatography with analytical measurement range of 3.8 to 18.5%. The Alinity c Hemoglobin A1c assay measured both total hemoglobin and HbA1c (enzymatic assay) in whole blood and then calculated %HbA1c. The analytical measurement range of this assay is 4 to 14% of HbA1c. We evaluated the analytical performance of Alinity c HbA1c by evaluating precision and also comparing 77 clinical samples with our reference HPLC method.
RESULTS: Both Alinity c HbA1c and Premier HB9210 have excellent total precision. Plotting HbA1c results obtained by the Premier Hb9210 analyzer in the x-axis (currently used reference method) and the corresponding values obtained by the Alinity c assay, we observed the following regression equation: y=0.9473x+0.1548 ( n=77, r=0.99).
DISCUSSION: Our result indicates that HbA1c enzymatic assay on the Alinity c analyzer showed values comparable to HPLC method. However, at the decision points (2.8% average negative bias at >6.4% and 3.3% average negative bias at 7%), HbA1c values obtained by the Alinity c analyzer were lower than the reference method.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that HbA1c assay on the Alinity c analyzer is a viable alternative to HPLC for measuring HbA1c in clinical laboratories but values at the decision points must be interpreted with caution and if necessary should be repeated by a reference HPLC method.
METHODS: The Premier Hb9210 analyzer is based on boronate affinity high performance liquid chromatography with analytical measurement range of 3.8 to 18.5%. The Alinity c Hemoglobin A1c assay measured both total hemoglobin and HbA1c (enzymatic assay) in whole blood and then calculated %HbA1c. The analytical measurement range of this assay is 4 to 14% of HbA1c. We evaluated the analytical performance of Alinity c HbA1c by evaluating precision and also comparing 77 clinical samples with our reference HPLC method.
RESULTS: Both Alinity c HbA1c and Premier HB9210 have excellent total precision. Plotting HbA1c results obtained by the Premier Hb9210 analyzer in the x-axis (currently used reference method) and the corresponding values obtained by the Alinity c assay, we observed the following regression equation: y=0.9473x+0.1548 ( n=77, r=0.99).
DISCUSSION: Our result indicates that HbA1c enzymatic assay on the Alinity c analyzer showed values comparable to HPLC method. However, at the decision points (2.8% average negative bias at >6.4% and 3.3% average negative bias at 7%), HbA1c values obtained by the Alinity c analyzer were lower than the reference method.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that HbA1c assay on the Alinity c analyzer is a viable alternative to HPLC for measuring HbA1c in clinical laboratories but values at the decision points must be interpreted with caution and if necessary should be repeated by a reference HPLC method.
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