Collaborative Study to Establish National Reference Standards for Anti-HIV-1 Antibodyopen access
- Authors
- Huh, Hee Jin; Kim, Soo-Kyung; Chung, Jae-Woo; Yoo, Soo Jin; Roh, Kyoung Ho; Chae, Seok Lae; Cha, Young Joo
- Issue Date
- May-2023
- Publisher
- 대한진단검사의학회
- Keywords
- Anti-HIV-1 antibody; HIV; Reference standard
- Citation
- Annals of Laboratory Medicine, v.43, no.3, pp 273 - 279
- Pages
- 7
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
- Journal Title
- Annals of Laboratory Medicine
- Volume
- 43
- Number
- 3
- Start Page
- 273
- End Page
- 279
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/21332
- DOI
- 10.3343/alm.2023.43.3.273
- ISSN
- 2234-3806
2234-3814
- Abstract
- Background: National reference standards for anti-HIV-1 antibody are needed to evaluate the performance and maintain the quality control of anti-HIV-1 antibody assays. The aim of this study was to prepare a mixed-titer performance panel and assess its suitability as a national reference standard for anti-HIV-1 antibody according to stability, collaboration, and other studies.Methods: Nineteen serum samples from different HIV patients were obtained, along with 15 units of fresh frozen plasma samples with negative anti-HIV-1 antibody results. Ten anti -HIV-1 antibody-positive candidate standards and two negative candidate standards were prepared based on the reactivity in the Alinity i HIV Ag/Ab combo assay (Abbott Laborato-ries, Wiesbaden, Germany). A collaborative study was conducted across eight laboratories using five anti-HIV-1 antibody assays. Real-time and accelerated stability were evaluated to assess the long-term stability.Results: In the collaborative study, results of all five anti-HIV-1 antibody assays were posi-tive for all 10 candidate standards prepared using HIV patient samples. The CV of each as-say for every candidate standard was within 10%, except for one assay result. No real-time and accelerated stability change trend was observed at -70 degrees C or -20 degrees C, supporting that the reference standards were maintained in a stable state at -70 degrees C for long-term storage. Conclusions: The overall results suggest that the 12 candidate standards could serve as national reference standards for anti-HIV-1 antibody.
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Collections - Graduate School > Department of Medicine > 1. Journal Articles

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