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  • Title: False-positive serum digoxin concentrations determined by three digoxin assays in patients with liver disease.
    Author: Frisolone J, Sylvia LM, Gelwan J, Pal S, Pellechia C.
    Journal: Clin Pharm; 1988 Jun; 7(6):444-9. PubMed ID: 3402179.
    Abstract:
    The incidence and magnitude of false-positive serum digoxin concentrations (SDCs) determined by three digoxin assays in patients with liver disease were studied. Patients with biochemical evidence of liver disease were enrolled in the study if they had never received a cardiac glycoside, were not pregnant, were not receiving spironolactone, did not have moderate to severe renal impairment, and did not have transient elevations in liver function test results. Blood specimens from each patient were assayed for apparent SDCs in triplicate using a fluorescence polarization immunoassay (FPIA, TDx Digoxin II, Abbott) and a digoxin radioimmunoassay (RIA, GammaCoat I125, Clinical Assays) and in duplicate using a fluorometric enzyme immunoassay (Dade Stratus, American Dade). Forty-two patients met the study criteria. The percentage of patients exhibiting detectable apparent SDCs (greater than or equal to 0.2 ng/mL) was 57% with RIA, 55% with FPIA, and 28% with the fluorometric enzyme immunoassay. Apparent SDCs ranged from 0.2 to 0.6 ng/mL (RIA), 0.2 to 1.56 ng/mL (FPIA), and 0.2 to 0.38 ng/mL (fluorometric enzyme immunoassay). Values obtained using the fluorometric enzyme immunoassay were significantly different from the apparent SDCs determined using RIA and FPIA; however, no significant difference was found between the values obtained using RIA and FPIA. Significant correlations were found between the apparent SDCs determined using RIA and serum bilirubin values and between the apparent SDCs determined using the fluorometric enzyme immunoassay and alkaline phosphatase values. Of the three assay methods tested, the fluorometric enzyme immunoassay showed the least cross-sensitivity to digoxin-like immunoreactive substance (DLIS).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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