Reduction of dilution error in ELISAs using an internal standard.

Thorsten Verch, Christopher Roselle, Mary Shank-Retzlaff
Author Information
  1. Thorsten Verch: Merck & Co., Inc., 770 Sumneytown Pike, PO Box 4, West Point, PA 19486, USA.
  2. Christopher Roselle: Merck & Co., Inc., 770 Sumneytown Pike, PO Box 4, West Point, PA 19486, USA.
  3. Mary Shank-Retzlaff: Merck & Co., Inc., 770 Sumneytown Pike, PO Box 4, West Point, PA 19486, USA.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Dilution bias is a major cause of immunoassay variability due to the lack of an internal standard to determine the true versus the expected dilution value.
METHODOLOGY: We used an internal control to measure dilution bias in an ELISA. Acridine-orange was added at the first dilution step and monitored throughout dilutions. Assay results were corrected using the fluorescent signal ratio between samples and reference. Acridine dilution correlated with analyte-specific assay measurements (R2 = 0.987). Correction of assay results with the measured dilution factor improved both accuracy and precision resulting in a reduction of >50% %CV reduction.
CONCLUSION: Dilution correction can significantly improve accuracy and precision of immunoassays. Additional control strategies may further mitigate other sources of variability.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Acridine Orange
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
Fluorescence
Fluorescent Dyes
Indicator Dilution Techniques

Chemicals

Fluorescent Dyes
Acridine Orange

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0dilutioninternalbiasstandardDilutionvariabilitycontrolELISAresultsusingassayaccuracyprecisionreductionBACKGROUND:majorcauseimmunoassayduelackdeterminetrueversusexpectedvalueMETHODOLOGY:usedmeasureAcridine-orangeaddedfirststepmonitoredthroughoutdilutionsAssaycorrectedfluorescentsignalratiosamplesreferenceAcridinecorrelatedanalyte-specificmeasurementsR2=0987Correctionmeasuredfactorimprovedresulting>50%%CVCONCLUSION:correctioncansignificantlyimproveimmunoassaysAdditionalstrategiesmaymitigatesourcesReductionerrorELISAs

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