Publication | Open Access
Semiautomated procedures for evaluation of carbohydrate-deficient transferrin in the diagnosis of alcohol abuse
47
Citations
16
References
1997
Year
Substance UseAxis TestsAlcohol MisuseNew Cdt TestsSemiautomated ProceduresBioanalysisBiostatisticsAnalytical ChemistryBiomarker DiscoveryClinical ChemistryLaboratory MedicineHealth SciencesCarbohydrate-deficient TransferrinAlcohol AbusePharmacologyAlcohol DependenceCdt TestsSubstance AbuseAddictionForensic ToxicologyMedicine
Carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) may now be the most valuable biological marker for diagnosis of alcohol abuse. We compared the diagnostic performance of two new CDT tests, Axis %CDT turbidimetric immunoassay (TIA) and Axis %CDT HPLC, against Specialty Laboratories' isoelectric focusing/immunoblotting/laser densitometry (IEF/IB/LD). Both Axis tests include one-half the concentration of trisialotransferrin isoforms in their CDT quantitation schemes. Considering an alcohol abuse prevalence of 7%, Axis %CDT TIA shows a sensitivity of 87% at 98% specificity and a positive predictive value (PPV) of 0.75; %CDT HPLC shows a sensitivity of 87% at 100% specificity for a PPV of 1, and the IEF/IB/LD shows 81% sensitivity at 94% specificity for a PPV of 0.5. All three CDT tests show the same negative predictive value (0.98). Both Axis procedures perform better than IEF/IB/LD in the diagnosis of alcohol abuse; %CDT TIA is available in several semiautomated, cost-effective formats.
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