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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

New rapid test for measuring dog C-reactive protein levels at vet

By Sarah Hindenberg et al.·Published in BMC Veterinary Research·2018·Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, Clinical Pathology and Clinical Pathophysiology, Justus-Liebig-University Giessen, GB·View original on DOAJ

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Original publication title: Evaluation of a novel quantitative canine species-specific point-of-care assay for C-reactive protein

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A new test for measuring C-reactive protein (CRP) in dogs was developed to help veterinarians quickly assess inflammation. This test, called the Point Strip™ Canine CRP Assay, was compared to established methods and showed excellent accuracy in detecting CRP levels in both healthy and sick dogs. The results indicated that the new test works well for moderate to high CRP concentrations, which are important for diagnosing health issues. However, due to some differences in results compared to traditional methods, it's recommended that follow-up tests use the same new assay for consistency.

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Abstract

Abstract Background Species-specific point-of-care tests (POCT) permit a rapid analysis of canine C-reactive protein (CRP), enabling veterinarians to include CRP in clinical decisions. Aim of the study was to evaluate a novel POCT for canine CRP (Point Strip™ Canine CRP Assay) run on a small in-house-analyzer (Point Reader™ V) using lithium heparin plasma and to compare assay performance to an already established canine CRP assay (Gentian Canine CRP Immunoassay) run on two different bench top analyzers serving as reference methods (ABX Pentra 400, AU 5800). Linearity was assessed by stepwise dilution of plasma samples with high CRP concentrations. Limit of quantification (LoQ) was determined by repeated measurements of samples with low CRP concentrations. Coefficient of variation (CV) at low (10–50 mg/l), moderate (50–100 mg/l), and high (100–200 mg/l) CRP concentrations was investigated as well as possible interferences. Method comparison study was performed using 45 samples of healthy and diseased dogs. Quality criteria were fulfilled if the total observed error (TEobs = 2CV% + bias%) was below the minimal total allowable error of 44.4% (TE min). Additionally, a reference range (n = 60 healthy dogs) was established. Results Linearity was present at CRP concentrations of 10–132 mg/l (≙ 361 mg/l CRP with reference method) with a LoQ set at 10 mg/l. At moderate to high CRP concentrations, intra- and inter-assay CVs were ≤ 8% and ≤ 11% respectively, while CVs ≤ 22% and ≤ 28% were present at low concentrations. No interferences were observed at concentrations of 4 g/l hemoglobin, 800 mg/l bilirubin and 8 g/l triglycerides. Method comparison study demonstrated an excellent correlation with both reference methods (r = 0.98 for ABX Pentra 400; 0.99 for AU 5800), though revealing a proportional bias of 19.7% (ABX Pentra 400) and 10.7% (AU 5800) respectively. TEobs was 26.7–31.9% and 16.7–21.9% and thus < TEmin. Healthy dogs presented with CRP values ≤11.9 mg/l. Conclusions The POCT precisely detects canine CRP at clinically relevant moderate and high CRP concentrations. The assay correlates well with both reference methods. Due to the bias, however, follow-up examinations should be performed with the same assay and analyzer.

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Original publication on DOAJ: https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-018-1415-2