Abstract

Hereditary factor XIII (FXIII) deficiency is a rare autosomal bleeding disorder which can cause life-threatening bleeding. Acquired deficiency can be immune-mediated or due to increased consumption or reduced synthesis. The most commonly used screening test is insensitive, and widely used quantitative assays have analytical limitations. The present study sought to validate Technofluor FXIII Activity, the first isopeptidase-based assay available on a routine coagulation analyser, the Ceveron s100. Linearity was evidenced throughout the measuring range, with correlation coefficients of >0.99, and coefficients of variation for repeatability and reproducibility were <5% and <10%, respectively. A normally distributed reference range of 47.0–135.5 IU/dL was derived from 154 normal donors. Clinical samples with Technofluor FXIII Activity results between 0 and 167.0 IU/dL were assayed with Berichrom® FXIII Activity, a functional ammonia release assay, and the HemosIL™ FXIII antigen assay, generating correlations of 0.950 and 0.980, respectively. Experiments with a transglutaminase inhibitor showed that Technofluor FXIII Activity can detect inhibition of enzymatic activity. No interference was exhibited by high levels of haemolysis and lipaemia, and interference by bilirubin was evident at 18 mg/dL, a level commensurate with severe liver disease. Technofluor FXIII Activity is a rapid, accurate and precise assay suitable for routine diagnostic use with fewer interferents than ammonia release FXIII activity assays.

Highlights

  • The present study extends that work by assessing clinical performance of the commercially available form of the assay, Technofluor factor XIII (FXIII) Activity (Technoclone, Vienna, Austria), on the Ceveron s100 coagulation analyser

  • Effectof ofincreasing increasingfibrinogen concentration on measurement of Detection of FXIII deficiency is an essential component of the analytical repertoire in a diagnostic haemostasis laboratory

  • The main drawback of ammonia release assays can be overcome by use of an iodoacetamide blank, it is not supplied with every commercial kit version of the assay and there is variable implementation of the blanking step when not supplied by the manufacturer [18]

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Summary

Introduction

Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. Factor XIII (FXIII) is a protransglutaminase whose activated form (FXIIIa) is the final enzyme in the sequence of blood coagulation biochemistry and plays a key role in clot stabilization and maturation [1,2]. FXIII circulates as a non-covalent, zymogen heterotetramer (FXIII-A2 B2 ) comprising two catalytic A-subunits and two inhibitory/carrier. B-subunits [3,4]. The FXIII-A2 B2 complex circulates in the plasma bound to fibrinogen 2 [6,7]. The cellular form of FXIII, such as that found in the platelet cytoplasm, is a homodimer of the A-subunits identical to those in plasma

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