Precision of a Clinical Metabolomics Profiling Platform for Use in the Identification of Inborn Errors of Metabolism

Author:

Ford Lisa1,Kennedy Adam D1,Goodman Kelli D1,Pappan Kirk L1,Evans Anne M1,Miller Luke A D1,Wulff Jacob E1,Wiggs Bobby R1,Lennon John J1,Elsea Sarah2,Toal Douglas R1

Affiliation:

1. Metabolon Inc., Morrisville, NC

2. Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX

Abstract

Abstract Background The application of whole-exome sequencing for the diagnosis of genetic disease has paved the way for systems-based approaches in the clinical laboratory. Here, we describe a clinical metabolomics method for the screening of metabolic diseases through the analysis of a multi-pronged mass spectrometry platform. By simultaneously measuring hundreds of metabolites in a single sample, clinical metabolomics offers a comprehensive approach to identify metabolic perturbations across multiple biochemical pathways. Methods We conducted a single- and multi-day precision study on hundreds of metabolites in human plasma on 4, multi-arm, high-throughput metabolomics platforms. Results The average laboratory coefficient of variation (CV) on the 4 platforms was between 9.3 and 11.5% (median, 6.5–8.4%), average inter-assay CV on the 4 platforms ranged from 9.9 to 12.6% (median, 7.0–8.3%) and average intra-assay CV on the 4 platforms ranged from 5.7 to 6.9% (median, 3.5–4.4%). In relation to patient sample testing, the precision of multiple biomarkers associated with IEM disorders showed CVs that ranged from 0.2 to 11.0% across 4 analytical batches. Conclusions This evaluation describes single and multi-day precision across 4 identical metabolomics platforms, comprised each of 4 independent method arms, and reproducibility of the method for the measurement of key IEM metabolites in patient samples across multiple analytical batches, providing evidence that the method is robust and reproducible for the screening of patients with inborn errors of metabolism.

Funder

Metabolon to institution

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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