Abstract

Aim Our laboratory has recently reported that serum treatment with EDTA is sufficient to overcome the prozone effect. However, it has been reported that in rare cases, specimens are partially resistant to EDTA treatment, and serum dilutions are still necessary. Although we have not encountered such case in our laboratory, we sought to determine if differences in the technical aspects of the assay may contribute to EDTA’s effectiveness. Methods We screened samples sent to our laboratory for HLA antibody testing for suspected prozone effect, based on MFI values of >15,000. Selected samples were tested in three protocols. Protocol #1: to determine the presence of prozone effect, serum samples were frozen, thawed, centrifuged (14,000 rpm for 10 min), and tested at neat, 1:4, 1:16, 1:64, and 1:264 by single antigen (SA) bead assays (One Lambda). Protocol #2: to test the clinically-validated method used by our lab, samples were frozen, thawed, centrifuged, treated with EDTA (4 mM), and tested at neat only; incubation and washing was performed in a 1 μM filter plate on a vacuum plate-washing system (Biotek ELx50). Protocol #3: to test the effect of EDTA in fresh samples with the manual washing method, fresh serum samples were centrifuged, treated with EDTA, and then tested at neat only; incubation and washing was performed in a traditional round-bottom plate. Data were acquired on a Luminex-200 and analyzed with HLAFusion software (One Lambda). Results We identified prozone effects in 18 patients’ samples: 8 patients’ class I antibodies, 8 patients’ class II antibodies, and 2 patients’ class I and II antibodies. Following EDTA treatment, fresh and frozen samples showed similar MFI values for the corresponding assignments, including 138 class I and 103 class II specificities. In addition, all determined specificities showed higher MFI values in EDTA-treated samples than the peak MFI value in sample with dilution only, regardless of which technical protocol was used. Conclusions Samples with prozone effect resistant to EDTA treatment were not detected in our study, independent of technical variability for sample processing. EDTA treatment fully overcomes prozone effect in our testing system. Factors causing low efficacy of EDTA in rare cases remain unknown.

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