Biological variation of cardiac myosin-binding protein C in healthy individuals

Author:

Alaour Bashir1,Omland Torbjørn23,Torsvik Janniche4,Kaier Thomas E.1,Sylte Marit S.4,Strand Heidi5,Quraishi Jasmine1,McGrath Sam6,Williams Luke6,Meex Steven7,Redwood Simon1,Marber Michael1,Aakre Kristin M.489ORCID

Affiliation:

1. King’s College London BHF Centre , The Rayne Institute, St Thomas’ Hospital , London , UK

2. Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo , Oslo , Norway

3. Department of Cardiology, Division of Medicine , Akershus University Hospital , Lørenskog , Norway

4. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Pharmacology , Haukeland University Hospital , Bergen , Norway

5. Multidisciplinary Laboratory Medicine and Medical Biochemistry , Akershus University Hospital , Lørenskog , Norway

6. Guys and St Thomas’ Hospital , London , UK

7. Cardiovascular Research Institute Maastricht (CARIM), Maastricht University Medical Center (MUMC) , Maastricht , The Netherlands

8. Department of Heart Disease , Haukeland University Hospital , Bergen , Norway

9. Department of Clinical Science , University of Bergen , Bergen , Norway

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Cardiac myosin-binding protein C (cMyC) is a novel biomarker of myocardial injury, with a promising role in the triage and risk stratification of patients presenting with acute cardiac disease. In this study, we assess the weekly biological variation of cMyC, to examine its potential in monitoring chronic myocardial injury, and to suggest analytical quality specification for routine use of the test in clinical practice. Methods Thirty healthy volunteers were included. Non-fasting samples were obtained once a week for ten consecutive weeks. Samples were tested in duplicate on the Erenna® platform by EMD Millipore Corporation. Outlying measurements and subjects were identified and excluded systematically, and homogeneity of analytical and within-subject variances was achieved before calculating the biological variability (CVI and CVG), reference change values (RCV) and index of individuality (II). Results Mean age was 38 (range, 21–64) years, and 16 participants were women (53%). The biological variation, RCV and II with 95% confidence interval (CI) were: CVA (%) 19.5 (17.8–21.6), CVI (%) 17.8 (14.8–21.0), CVG (%) 66.9 (50.4–109.9), RCV (%) 106.7 (96.6–120.1)/−51.6 (−54.6 to −49.1) and II 0.42 (0.29–0.56). There was a trend for women to have lower CVG. The calculated RCVs were comparable between genders. Conclusions cMyC exhibits acceptable RCV and low II suggesting that it could be suitable for disease monitoring, risk stratification and prognostication if measured serially. Analytical quality specifications based on biological variation are similar to those for cardiac troponin and should be achievable at clinically relevant concentrations.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine

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