Development of a quantitative fluorescence lateral flow immunoassay (LFIA) prototype for point-of-need detection of anti-Müllerian hormone

Anti-Müllerian Hormone (AMH) is a quantitative marker for ovarian reserve and is used to predict response during ovarian stimulation. Streamlining testing to the clinic or even to the physician's office would reduce inconvenience, turnaround time, patient stress and potentially also the total c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Practical laboratory medicine 2023-05, Vol.35, p.e00314, Article e00314
Hauptverfasser: Goux, Heather J., Vu, Binh V., Wasden, Katherine, Alpadi, Kannan, Kumar, Ajay, Kalra, Bhanu, Savjani, Gopal, Brosamer, Kristen, Kourentzi, Katerina, Willson, Richard C.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Anti-Müllerian Hormone (AMH) is a quantitative marker for ovarian reserve and is used to predict response during ovarian stimulation. Streamlining testing to the clinic or even to the physician's office would reduce inconvenience, turnaround time, patient stress and potentially also the total cost of testing, allowing for more frequent monitoring. In this paper, AMH is used as a model biomarker to describe the rational development and optimization of sensitive, quantitative, clinic-based rapid diagnostic tests. We developed a one-step lateral-flow europium (III) chelate-based fluorescent immunoassay (LFIA) for the detection of AMH on a portable fluorescent reader, optimizing the capture/detection antibodies, running buffer, and reporter conjugates. A panel of commercial calibrators was used to develop a standard curve to determine the analytical sensitivity (LOD = 0.41 ng/ml) and the analytical range (0.41–15.6 ng/ml) of the LFIA. Commercial controls were then tested to perform an initial evaluation of the prototype performance and showed a high degree of precision (Control I CV 2.18%; Control II CV 3.61%) and accuracy (Control I recovery 126%; Control II recovery 103%). Conclusions: This initial evaluation suggests that, in future clinical testing, the AMH LFIA will likely have the capability of distinguishing women with low ovarian reserve (
ISSN:2352-5517
2352-5517
DOI:10.1016/j.plabm.2023.e00314