Abstract

BackgroundLithium is a cornerstone in the treatment of bipolar disorder and is considered one of the most effective treatments in psychiatry at large. Lithium treatment requires individual dosing with frequent serum concentration measurements due to the narrow therapeutic window and risk of toxicity. There is need for patient-centric methods for lithium monitoring and the use of dried blood spots has recently been proposed for determination of lithium concentration. The purpose of the current study was to assess feasibility of this method by introducing a volumetric technique developed for home-sampling. Materials and methodsLaboratory: Capillary blood was sampled by finger-prick using a volumetric device that collects 10 µL volumes as a dried blood spot. Lithium was measured in the dried blood spots using a validated atomic absorption spectroscopy method. Clinical: Thirty-nine lithium-treated patients were recruited, and dried blood spots and venous blood samples were collected. Routine serum analysis was performed for comparison. ResultsThe range of serum lithium concentrations was 0.41–1.22 mmol/L, and the dried blood spot/serum ratio was 0.78. A strong linear correlation between the two specimens was shown with Pearson’s R = 0.95 (r2 = 0.90). Adding hematocrit as a variable only minimally improved prediction. ConclusionVolumetric dried blood spots is a promising technique for measurement of lithium concentrations. This will enable home-sampling and could potentially save resources, improve compliance, and make treatment safer. This may facilitate the use of lithium treatment in regions where monitoring via venous blood sampling remains difficult. However, the usability of dried blood spots for monitoring lithium treatment longitudinally remains to be examined.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call