scholarly journals Comparison of Pituitary and Recombinant Human Thyroid-stimulating Hormone (rhTSH) in a Multicenter Collaborative Study: Establishment of the First World Health Organization Reference Reagent for rhTSH

1999 ◽  
Vol 45 (12) ◽  
pp. 2207-2215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian Rafferty ◽  
Rose Gaines Das

Abstract Background: The increasing use of recombinant-DNA-derived materials in therapy and diagnosis poses a new challenge for biological standardization, that of developing reference preparations appropriate for both the native and recombinant products. Here we report the results of an international collaborative study that was carried out under the auspices of WHO to assess the suitability of a preparation of recombinant thyroid-stimulating hormone (rTSH; 94/674) to serve as a potential standard for the calibration of diagnostic immunoassays compared with the International Reference Preparation (IRP) for human TSH (80/558). Methods: Coded samples were provided to the 33 laboratories in the study, and participants were asked to perform TSH assays currently in use in their laboratories. Twenty-eight laboratories contributed 93 immunoassays in 41 different method-laboratory combinations, and an additional 5 laboratories contributed bioassay data. All data were analyzed centrally at the National Institute for Biological Standards and Control. Results: The results obtained in different laboratories and with different assay systems revealed significant variability between estimates of rTSH relative to the IRP. These ranged from 5.51 mIU (95% limits, 3.95–7.67 mIU) per ampoule by RIA to 7.15 mIU (95% limits, 6.7–7.63 mIU) per ampoule by immunofluorometric assay. However, the results showed that the assignment of a value of 6.70 mIU per ampoule of 94/674 would give reasonable continuity with the IRP in many assay systems. Conclusions: The preparation was established as the First WHO Reference Reagent for TSH, human, recombinant, to provide a means of validating assay performance and to maintain continuity with the IRP without compromising clinical data.

1985 ◽  
Vol 104 (3) ◽  
pp. 367-379 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. E. Gaines Das ◽  
A. F. Bristow

ABSTRACT Four batches of ampouled materials in ampoules coded 80/558, 81/502, 81/565 and 81/615 were evaluated by 22 laboratories in nine countries in an international collaborative study for their suitability to serve as a replacement for the First International Reference Preparation (IRP) of TSH, Human, for Immunoassay. The ampouled preparations were calibrated by immunoassay and bioassay. The preparation coded 80/558 had satisfactory stability and contained acceptably low levels of contamination with FSH and LH. Estimates of the immunoreactive TSH content of a set of specimens of serum in terms of 80/558 showed agreement in ranking order and no increase in variability compared with estimates made by assay against the First IRP. On the basis of these results, with the agreement of the participants in the study, and with the authorization of the Expert Committee on Biological Standardization of the World Health Organization, the preparation coded 80/558 was established in 1983 as the Second International Reference Preparation of TSH, Human, for Immunoassay, with a defined potency of 37 mi.u./ampoule. Preparations coded 81/502, 81/565 and 81/615 were found suitable to serve as working standards. J. Endocr. (1985) 104, 367–379


1998 ◽  
Vol 79 (02) ◽  
pp. 439-443 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veena Chantarangkul ◽  
Barbara Negri ◽  
Marigrazia Clerici ◽  
Pier Mannuccio Mannucci ◽  
Armando Tripodi

SummaryStocks of the International Reference Preparation (IRP) for thromboplastin, human, plain, coded BCT/253 and held by the World Health Organization (WHO) are nearly exhausted and must be replaced. For practical reasons the choice of the replacement candidate was restricted to two available human recombinant preparations which were coded as X/95 and Y/95 and calibrated in an international collaborative study involving 19 laboratories from Europe, Australia, Canada and Argentina. To minimize the differences between routes of calibration, the two candidates were calibrated against the existing WHO-IRP from human, rabbit and bovine origin and the final ISI was the resultant average value. On the basis of predefined criteria (i.e., within- and between-laboratory precision of the calibration and the conformity to the calibration model), X/95 was the preferred candidate. The assigned ISI (SE of the mean) value is 0.940 (0.0060) and the interlaboratory coefficient of variation 4.7%.


1983 ◽  
Vol 49 (03) ◽  
pp. 238-244 ◽  
Author(s):  
T B L Kirkwood

SummaryThromboplastins vary in their sensitivity to the haemostatic defect induced by oral anticoagulants. To provide a means of standardising prothrombin time tests, the World Health Organization adopted in 1977 a scheme for calibrating thromboplastins in terms of an International Reference Preparation. Unfortunately, the model on which this scheme was based does not always hold. A revised calibration model has therefore been developed and this has been tested in a recent collaborative study. The revised model, which retains fundamentally the same principle for standardising prothrombin time tests, has proved suitable for calibrating thromboplastins of different species and types and, moreover, has certain statistical advantages over its predecessor. In September 1982, the WHO Expert Committee on Biological Standardization adopted the revised model. This paper explains the nature and rationale of this change and considers its practical implications.


1993 ◽  
Vol 128 (5) ◽  
pp. 443-450 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joan M Zanelli ◽  
Rose E Gaines-Das ◽  
P Corran

The biological potency of calcitonins in clinical use in long-term treatment of Paget's disease of bone and, increasingly, in osteoporosis is usually expressed in international units defined by the relevant World Health Organization international reference preparation. The international reference preparations for porcine and human calcitonins were ampouled in 1970 and stocks are now exhausted. Replacement standards were ampouled in 1989 and have been evaluated and calibrated by an international collaborative study comprising 16 laboratories in 12 countries. Evaluations included high-performance liquid chromatography and in vitro bioassay; calibration of each new ampouled preparation in terms of its international reference preparation was by in vivo rat hypocalcaemia bioassay. On the basis of the results of the study and with the agreement of the participants, replacement standards were established by the Expert Committee on Biological Standardization of the World Health Organization in 1991: the international standard for porcine calcitonin (ampoule code 89/540), with an assigned potency of 0.8 international units per ampoule, and the international standard for human calcitonin, with an assigned potency of 17.5 international units per ampoule. Both international standards appeared to be sufficiently stable to serve as the international standards for in vivo biological assays. Comparison of the two species of calcitonin in the same hypocalcaemia assay showed that they were approximately equipotent when the doses were given intravenously but that the human peptide was four- to sixfold more potent than porcine calcitonin when doses were given subcutaneously, emphasizing the need to compare "like with like".


1980 ◽  
Vol 93 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rose E. Gaines Das ◽  
Joan M. Zanelli

Abstract. An international reference material is required for bioassays of preparations of synthetic human calcitonin for administration to man and for use in immunoassays. A preparation of synthetic human calcitonin in ampoules coded 70/234 (previously widely used as the MRC Research Standard) has been examined in an international collaborative study involving 7 laboratories in 6 countries. The results of 34 in vivo bioassays with two other preparations of synthetic human calcitonin showed that this preparation was suitable to serve as a standard. With the agreement of the participants in the collaborative study, the batch of ampoules, code 70/234, was established in 1978 by the World Health Organization as the International Reference Preparation of Calcitonin, Human, for Bioassay. The International Unit of human calcitonin was defined as the activity contained in one ampoule of this preparation, thus maintaining continuity of the unit of the research standard.


1989 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-NP ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Schulster ◽  
R. E. Gaines Das ◽  
S. L. Jeffcoate

ABSTRACT Three ampouled preparations of purified human prolactin were assessed by 20 laboratories in eight countries for their suitability to serve as International Standards for the estimation of human prolactin in serum. Bioassays (pigeon crop sac assays and NB2 cell assays) were carried out in two laboratories, radioreceptor assays by one laboratory and radioimmunoassays by 17 laboratories. By physicochemical analysis the preparations appeared similar. Each preparation contained small amounts of contaminants and/or prolactin variants. No major differences among the three preparations were detected by immunoassay although, in one radioreceptor assay system, one of the preparations was found to differ from the other two. On the basis of all the available information, the Expert Committee on Biological Standardization of the World Health Organization (ECBS) in 1986 established the preparation in ampoules coded 83/562 as the Second International Standard for Prolactin and in October 1988 established the preparation in ampoules coded 84/500 as the Third International Standard for Prolactin. A value of 0·053 IU (53 mIU) prolactin activity/ampoule was assigned to both the Second and Third IS on the basis that this unitage would, insofar as possible, maintain continuity of the IU defined by the First International Reference Preparation of Prolactin, human, for Immunoassay (coded 75/504). Journal of Endocrinology (1989) 121, 157–166


1992 ◽  
Vol 67 (04) ◽  
pp. 424-427 ◽  
Author(s):  
P J Gaffney ◽  
A B Heath ◽  
J W Fenton II

SummarySince 1975 an International Standard for Thrombin of low purity has been used. While this standard was stable and of value for calibrating thrombins of unknown potency the need for a pure a-thrombin standard arose both for accurate calibration and for precise measurement of thrombin inhibitors, notably hirudin. An international collaborative study was undertaken to establish the potency and stability of an ampouled pure a-thrombin preparation. A potency of 97.5 international units (95% confidence limits 86.5-98.5) was established for the new a-thrombin standard (89/ 588) using a clotting-assay procedure. Stability data at various elevated temperatures indicated that the standard could be transported and stored with no significant loss of potency.Ampoules of lyophilised a-thrombin (coded 89/588) have been recommended as an International Standard for a-thrombin with an assigned potency of 100 international units per ampoule by the International Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis (Thrombin and its Inhibitors Sub-Committee) in Barcelona, Spain in July 1990 while the Expert Committee on Biological Standardisation and Control of the World Health Organisation will consider its status at its next meeting in Geneva in 1991.


1985 ◽  
Vol 53 (01) ◽  
pp. 134-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
P J Gaffney ◽  
A D Curtis

SummaryAn international collaborative study involving seven laboratories was undertaken to assess which of three lyophilised preparations might serve as an International Standard (I.S.) for tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA). Two of the preparations were isolates from human melanoma cell cultures while one was of pig heart origin. A clot lysis assay was used by all participants in the study.The data suggested that both preparations of human cell origin were comparable, in that their log dose-response lines were parallel, while that of the porcine preparation was not. Accelerated degradation studies indicated that one melanoma extract (denoted 83/517) was more stable than the other and it was decided to recommend preparation 83/517 as the standard for t-PA. The International Committee for Thrombosis and Haemostasis (Stockholm 1983) has recommended the use of this material as a standard and it has been established by the Expert Committee on Biological Standardization of the World Health Organization as the International, Standard for tissue plasminogen activator, with an assigned potency of 1000 International Units per ampoule.


1983 ◽  
Vol 50 (03) ◽  
pp. 697-702 ◽  
Author(s):  
T W Barrowcliffe ◽  
A D Curtis ◽  
D P Thomas

SummaryAn international collaborative study was carried out to establish a replacement for the current (2nd) international standard for Factor VIII: C, concentrate. Twenty-six laboratories took part, of which 17 performed one-stage assays, three performed two-stage assays and six used both methods. The proposed new standard, an intermediate purity concentrate, was assayed against the current standard, against a high-purity concentrate and against an International Reference Plasma, coded 80/511, previously calibrated against fresh normal plasma.Assays of the proposed new standard against the current standard gave a mean potency of 3.89 iu/ampoule, with good agreement between laboratories and between one-stage and two- stage assays. There was also no difference between assay methods in the comparison of high-purity and intermediate purity concentrates. In the comparison of the proposed standard with the plasma reference preparation, the overall mean potency was 4.03 iu/ampoule, but there were substantial differences between laboratories, and the two-stage method gave significantly higher results than the one stage method. Of the technical variables in the one-stage method, only the activation time with one reagent appeared to have any influence on the results of this comparison of concentrate against plasma.Accelerated degradation studies showed that the proposed standard is very stable. With the agreement of the participants, the material, in ampoules coded 80/556, has been established by the World Health Organization as the 3rd International Standard for Factor VIII :C, Concentrate, with an assigned potency of 3.9 iu/ampoule.


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