Abstract

Radioimmunoassay (RIA) is the “gold standard” method for evaluation of serum cortisol concentration. The VIDAS cortisol test is an enzyme-linked fluorescent assay designed for the MiniVidas system. The aim of this study was to compare the VIDAS method with RIA for measurement of bovine serum cortisol concentration. Cortisol concentrations were evaluated in 40 cows using both VIDAS and RIA methods, the latter as the reference method. A paired Student's t-test, Pearson's correlation analysis, Bland-Altman plot, and Deming regression analysis were used to compare the two methods. There was no statistically significant difference between mean serum cortisol concentrations measured by VIDAS or RIA methods (P = 0.6570). Both methods were able to detect significant differences in mean low and high cortisol concentrations (P < 0.00014 RIA and P < 0.0016 VIDAS). The correlation coefficient was low, but a Bland-Altman plot and Deming regression analysis show neither constant nor proportional error. The VIDAS method produced slightly higher values than RIA, but the difference was small and in no case did the mean value move the normal range. Results suggest that VIDAS method is suitable for the determination of bovine serum cortisol concentration in studies of large numbers of animals.

Highlights

  • Cortisol is involved in numerous metabolic and immunologic functions

  • Cortisol concentrations obtained using the VIDAS method were 9.96% higher than those obtained with RIA

  • The correlation coefficient (r) between cortisol values measured by the RIA and VIDAS methods was 0.1790

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Summary

Introduction

Cortisol is involved in numerous metabolic and immunologic functions. Serum cortisol concentration varies due to circadian rhythms, diet, environmental temperature, or humidity and physiological conditions [1, 2]. Measurement of serum cortisol concentration has been used in the assessment of stress and pain caused by mismanagement, travel, inappropriate environmental temperature, castration without local anesthesia, and disease [2,3,4,5,6,7]. Measurement of serum cortisol concentration is common in large animal medicine to monitor effects of modern farming practices on animal welfare [1]. Radioimmunoassay (RIA) is the traditional “gold standard” method for evaluation of serum cortisol concentration [8, 9]. There are several disadvantages of this method such as short shelflives of the radioactive reagents, risk of radiation exposure for staff, and the need to dispose of toxic waste [8, 10, 11]

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