Comparison of PETINIA and LC-MS/MS for determining plasma mycophenolic acid concentrations in Japanese lung transplant recipients

Background Mycophenolic acid (MPA) treatment requires therapeutic drug monitoring to improve the outcome after organ transplantation. The aim of this study was to compare two methods, a particle enhanced turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay (PETINIA) and a reference liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) for determining plasma MPA concentrations from Japanese lung transplant recipients. Methods Plasma MPA concentrations were determined from 20 Japanese lung transplant recipients using LC-MS/MS and the PETINIA on the Dimension Xpand Plus-HM analyzer. Results The mean MPA concentration measured by PETINIA was significantly higher than that measured by LC-MS/MS (3.26 ± 2.73 μg/mL versus 2.82 ± 2.71 μg/mL, P < 0.0001). The result of the Passing Bablok analysis was a slope of 1.104 (95% confidence interval [CI], 1.036–1.150) and an intercept of 0.229 (95%CI, 0.144–0.315). Bland–Altman analysis revealed PETINIA overestimates plasma MPA concentration by 26.25% and 95%CI from 21.43 to 31.07%. Conclusion The measurement of MPA by the PETINIA in Japanese lung transplant patients should evaluate the result with attention to positive bias.


Background
Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) is an orally ingestible prodrug of mycophenolic acid (MPA), which exerts immunosuppressive activity. MMF is widely used as an immunosuppressant to prevent rejection after organ transplantation [1]. Dose adjustment of MMF based on plasma MPA concentration has been reported to improve therapeutic performance [2]. Therefore, accurate analytical methods are necessary to measure plasma MPA concentration. MPA in plasma can be determined by high performance liquid chromatography combined with ultraviolet detection (HPLC-UV), liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), or automated immunoassays [3,4]. Although immunoassays are widely used in clinical laboratories due to ease of adopting such methods on automated analyzers, both immunoassays and chromatographic methods are available for therapeutic drug monitoring of MPA. Recently, Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics (Newark, DE, USA) developed a particle-enhanced turbidimetric inhibition immunoassay (PETINIA) to determine MPA (Flex reagent cartridge) using the Dimension analyzers. As PETI-NIA shows cross-reactivity with the pharmacologically active mycophenolic acid acyl glucuronide (AcMPAG), plasma MPA concentration is often overestimated [package insert] [5]. In fact, plasma MPA concentration in the liver, kidney, and heart transplant patients has been reported to exhibit a positive bias [6,7]. On the other hand, although the enzyme multiplied immunoassay technique (EMIT) also shows crossreactivity with AcMPAG, it has been reported that MPA concentration showed almost no positive bias in islet transplant patients, or positive bias in liver transplantation or kidney transplantation [7,8]. In addition, the pharmacokinetics of MPA and its metabolites are reported to be different between lung transplant patients and heart transplant patients [9]. Moreover, it has been reported that MPAG clearance in Caucasians is significantly higher than that in Chinese subjects, suggesting pharmacokinetic differences between races [10]. Therefore, the pharmacokinetics of MPA and its metabolites is presumed to differ for each transplanted organ and race. However, limited data exist for plasma MPA concentration by PETINIA, and have not been reported for Japanese patients or lung transplantation recipients. The aim of this study was to compare MPA concentrations obtained by PETINIA and LC-MS/MS, as a reference method, using samples from Japanese lung transplant recipients.

Study design
This study was prospectively designed, and all procedures were approved by the Ethics Committee of Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine (2015-1-150). Plasma samples were collected from patients at Tohoku University Hospital after receiving informed consent.

Immunosuppressive regimen
MMF was orally administered twice daily on empty stomach. In patients who received 250 mg/day of MMF, it was administered only once daily to avoid adverse effects. MMF was used in combination with tacrolimus (TAC) or cyclosporine (CyA) and prednisolone to maintain immunosuppression.

Clinical sample collection
Blood samples were obtained, before, 0.5 h after, and 2 h after MMF administration, from Japanese lung transplant patients. Blood samples were collected in 3 mL heparinized collection tubes, and centrifuged at 1580 g for 10 min at 4°C to obtain the plasma. All plasma samples were stored at − 40°C until measurement. MPA concentration was determined by using PETINIA and LC-MS/MS on the same day.

LC-MS/MS (reference method)
We used a slightly modified-method based on the report by Md Dom et al. and Kawanishi et al. [11,12]. Thirty microliters of plasma was mixed with 30 μL of 1 μg/mL mycophenolic acid-d3 (MPA-D 3 ), the internal standard, and 120 μL of acetonitrile. The mixture was vortexmixed for 1 min and centrifuged at 15,100 g for 5 min. Next, 100 μL of the supernatant was diluted 1:2 with water and a 3 μL aliquot was injected into the LC-MS/ MS system (LCMS-8050; Shimadzu, Kyoto, Japan). The LC-MS/MS system was operated in multiple reaction monitoring mode with positive-ion detection mode. The temperatures of the columns and autosampler were maintained at 40°C and 4°C, respectively. LabSolutions LCMS software (Shimadzu) was used to control the instruments and to process the data. For MPA analysis, chromatographic separation was achieved using a Shimpack GIS (75 mm × 2.1 mm i.d., particle size 3 μm: Shimadzu GLC, Tokyo, Japan) under isocratic elution conditions, with a mobile phase consisting of 1% acetic acid in water/acetonitrile (1: We used six calibrators with concentrations of 0.06, 0.2, 0.6, 2, 6, and 20.0 μg/mL for developing a calibration curve. The lower limit of quantitation was defined as the lowest concentration with a signal-to-noise ratio of at least 10. Three controls (0.1, 5, and 15 μg/mL) were used for quality control. Linearity was achieved with a correlation coefficient of 0.999. The intra-day and interday precisions were less than 3.7%, and accuracy was within ±8.5%.

PETINIA
The mycophenolic acid assay kits (Dimension® MPAT Flex® reagent cartridge), calibrators, and controls were provided by Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics (Newark, DE, USA), and assays were run using a Dimension Xpand Plus-HM analyzer, also obtained from Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics. The assay was based on a direct, fully automated method, as per the manufacturer's instructions, and was valid from 0.2 to 30.0 μg/mL.

Statistical analysis
The comparison between PETINIA and LC-MS/MS was performed using the Wilcoxon signed rank test. Consistency of the results was analyzed using Passing-Bablok regression analysis and Bland-Altman difference plots. P-values of < 0.05 were considered to indicate a significant difference for the above tests.

Discussion
This is the first study to compare PETINIA and LC-MS/ MS in determining plasma MPA concentrations in Japanese patients and lung transplant recipients. A PETINIA method overestimates plasma MPA concentration due to cross-reactivity of AcMPAG, and is known to have an average value of approximately 50% (package insert). Hence, the AcMPAG cross-reactivity greatly influenced plasma MPA concentration, even in Japanese lung transplant patients. Our study revealed an average positive bias of 0.44 μg/mL (26.3%) in the PETINIA analysis compared to that with LC-MS/MS in lung transplant patients. Dasgupta [7]. The result of this study was the second highest average positive bias after that found in heart transplantation patients. Although research on liver, kidney, and heart transplant patients does not describe kidney function, there were many patients with decreased kidney function due to adverse effects of TAC or CyA in this study. Previously, González-Roncero et al. reported that MMF dose or MPA 12-hour area under the concentration-time curve (AUC 0-12 ) values were not affected by kidney function, but mean pre-dose levels of AcMPAG-C0 and AcMPAG-AUC 0-12 were much higher in patients with advanced kidney insufficiency than in those with preserved kidney function [13]. However, there was no difference in average positive bias between patients with normal or mild loss of kidney function, and mild-tomoderate or moderate-to-severe loss of kidney function in this study. Therefore, this large positive bias in Japanese lung transplant patients may be related to factors such as transplanted organ and race.
Although there was almost no difference in absolute bias between sampling times (C0, C0.5, C2), the absolute percentage bias was found to be different from 31.83%, 28.19%, and 18.54%, respectively. In vitro research  [17]. In this study, the number of combined uses of MPA and TAC was very high in 17 of 20 cases. Therefore, it was considered that the difference in absolute bias between the sampling times was small.
As EMIT also shows cross-reactivity with AcMPAG, plasma MPA concentration is known to be overestimated [7]. Therefore, the guidelines on therapeutic drug monitoring of immunosuppressive drugs in organ transplantation recommend that AUC 0-12 values in the early posttransplant stages be maintained within the therapeutic window of 30-60 μg·h/mL for HPLC, or 35-70 μg·h/mL for EMIT. It is recommended the target pre-dose concentration be maintained within the range of 1-3.5 μg/mL for HPLC and 1.3-4.5 μg/mL for EMIT [18]. Although the target AUC 0-12 value and pre-dose concentration by PETINIA is not described in the a b c Fig. 1 Comparison of MPA concentration from PETINIA and LC-MS/MS assays using Passing-Bablok regression analysis (a) and Bland-Altman difference plots (b, c) guideline, it should be maintained higher than HPLC in Japanese lung transplant patients.

Conclusion
Measurement results of MPA by the PETINIA method in Japanese lung transplant patients should be evaluated with attention to positive bias.