Determination of methylmalonic acid, 2-methylcitric acid, and total homocysteine in dried blood spots by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry: A reliable follow-up method for propionylcarnitine-related disorders in newborn screening

2020 ◽  
pp. 096914132093772
Author(s):  
Zhenzhen Hu ◽  
Jianbin Yang ◽  
Yiming Lin ◽  
Junjuan Wang ◽  
Lingwei Hu ◽  
...  

Objectives Determination of methylmalonic acid, 2-methylcitric acid, and total homocysteine in dried blood spots by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry has usually been used as a second-tier test to improve performance of newborn screening for propionylcarnitine-related disorders. However, factors that potentially affect its detection results have not been investigated, and we aimed to evaluate these influencing factors and explore their potential utility in newborn screening and initial follow-up for propionylcarnitine-related disorders. Methods This study comprised a prospective group (1998 healthy infants, to establish cutoff values and investigate the influencing factors) and a retrospective group (804 suspected positive cases screened from 381, 399 newborns for propionylcarnitine-related disorders by tandem mass spectrometry, to evaluate the performance of newborn screening and initial follow-up). Results Cutoff values for methylmalonic acid, 2-methylcitric acid, and total homocysteine were 2.12, 0.70, and 10.05 µmol/l, respectively. Concentration of methylmalonic acid, 2-methylcitric acid, and total homocysteine in dried blood spots is not impacted by sex, age, birth weight, gestational age, or dried blood spot storage time. A total of 75 of 804 cases were screened positive by combined tandem mass spectrometry and liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry, thus eliminating 90% of the false positives without compromising sensitivity. Eighteen propionylcarnitine-related disorders were successfully identified, including one CblX case missed in the initial follow-up by tandem mass spectrometry. Conclusions Methylmalonic acid, 2-methylcitric acid, and total homocysteine detected in dried blood spots by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry is a reliable, specific, and sensitive approach for identifying propionylcarnitine-related disorders. We recommend this assay should be performed rather than tandem mass spectrometry in follow-up for propionylcarnitine-related disorders besides second-tier tests in newborn screening.

Author(s):  
Bijo Varughese ◽  
Dnyanoba Madrewar ◽  
Sunil Kumar Polipalli ◽  
Siddarth Ramji ◽  
Seema Kapoor

Introduction: Inactivity or diminished activity of an enzyme Methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (a Cobalamin dependent) enzyme causes inborn error of metabolism named Methylmalonic Acidemia/Aciduria (MMA). Liquid Chromatography-tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) based method for the diagnosis of MMA in Newborn Screening (NBS), is often challenging due to the nonspecificity of propionylcarnitine (C3), a primary marker in routine NBS. Aim: To develop a Flow Injection Analysis (FIA) method for the second-tier estimation of Methylmalonic acid in the Dried Blood Spots (DBS) of primary NBS. Materials and Methods: A retrospective NBS study was conducted for a period of two years i.e. (November 2015 to November 2017) at the Paediatrics Research and Genetic Lab of Maulana Azad Medical College associated Lok Nayak Hospital, a Tertiary Care Centre in New Delhi, India. DBS samples were collected by heel- prick method and a second tier detection, quantification of methylmalonic acid was performed by LC-MS/MS on all samples with abnormal C3 levels in primary NBS. Multiple Reaction Monitoring (MRM) mode at m/z 117→73 for MMA and m/z 120→75 for MMA(IS) and isotopic dilution approach was followed for quantification. Results: Intra-assay and inter-assay precision and accuracy was determined at two different levels of MMA (LQC≅2.0 μmol/L and HQC≅10.0 μmol/L), respectively. The Coefficient of Variation (%) for intraday precision ranged between 5.27% to 8.9%. Similarly, for interday it ranged from 4.99% to 9.93%. The average accuracy (%) also falls within (105.4% and 106.1%) for interday and (105.9% and 106.7%) for intraday assay. Stability for samples during storage at different temperature i.e., (fresh, 2-8°C and -20°C) showed long term stability at -20°C storage. The assay was linear over a calibration range of (0.5 to 20.00 μmol/L). Conclusion: The outcome of the present data offers the confidence and reliability in the possible utility of this method for the definitive diagnosis and follows-up of MMA patients.


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