Abstract
Salivary eosinophil cationic protein (ECP) level has the potential to be an assessment tool for asthma. Its measurement is not well-established and needs standardization. We studied how passive drool (PD) and two commercial devices, Salivette(®) (cotton-based device) and Sorbette(®) (cellulose-cotton-based-device), may affect ECP levels during collection among healthy subjects. Study I (n = 10) involved direct sampling of healthy adult subjects with Salivette(®) and Sorbette(®). Study II (n = 33) involved 'indirect' sampling of previously collected PD by both devices. In study I, ECP levels were detected in all PD samples but only in three with Sorbette(®) and none with Salivette(®) (collection order: PD, Sorbette(®) and Salivette(®)). We changed the order of collection (Salivette(®), Sorbette(®), PD) and the results were similar (ECP levels detected in all PD samples, three with Sorbette(®) and only one with Salivette(®)). In study II, ECP levels in saliva collected by PD was 12.8 μg/L (median) and using Sorbette(®) and Salivette(®) were < 2.0 μg/L and 3.4 μg/L respectively (p < 0.01). ECP levels in PD correlated with Sorbette(®) (r(s) = 0.79, p < 0.01) and Salivette(®) (r(s) = 0.62, p < 0.01). Compared to PD, saliva collected using cotton or cellulose-based collection devices resulted in lower measurable ECP levels.
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