Abstract
Densitometric quantitation using serum protein electrophoresis (SPE) is used to monitor monoclonal proteins (M-proteins) in human patients but has not been validated in the dog. Serum globulin concentrations, species-specific radial immunodiffusion (RID), and ELISAs are currently used in veterinary medicine. We aimed to compare four methods that quantify M-proteins using densitometry and biuret protein (dM-protein) measurements. We also validated the best performing method and compared it with the RID and ELISA methods for measuring canine serum M-protein. Serum from six normal dogs and 83 serum samples from 46 dogs with confirmed monoclonal gammopathies were used. A spike and recovery experiment with purified monoclonal IgG and IgM, inter-run and intra-run variability, linearity under dilution, and lower limit of detection were performed. Results of commercial canine RID and ELISA kits for total class-specific immunoglobulin were compared with dM-proteins. The corrected perpendicular drop gating method had <20% error for IgG/γ-globulin and IgM/β-globulin M-protein quantifications. Linearity (r>.99), intra-run CV (1.1%-2.3%), and inter-run CVs (2.0%-3.5%) were acceptable. Correlation between the RID and densitometry results ranged from r=.25 to r=.88, depending on the class. The RID result was greater than that of the biuret total protein in 26/63 (41%) IgA cases. A panel of IgG, IgA, and IgM RIDs failed to correctly identify an IgM paraproteinemia in 6/6 (100%) cases. Densitometry was not comparable with any other tested method. Densitometric quantitation is a valid technique for measuring M-proteins in the β- and γ-globulin regions. Immunotyping via RID using the tested kit does not appear to detect IgM. Densitometry is recommended for measuring M-proteins in canine patients.
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