https://sciex.com/content/SCIEX/na/us/en


Vitamin D Analysis Made Simple

Oct 19, 2017 | Blogs, Clinical | 0 comments

Last month, Dr. Phil Levy, a clinician, professor, and researcher at Wayne State University, was invited to SCIEX to lecture on Vitamin D Measurement and Implications for Patient Care.’ His message was simple and very clear: Vitamin D testing is here to stay!

He cites that Vitamin D testing is on the rise, and this is mainly due to the many associated conditions and impact on human health driven by risk-association studies linking Vitamin D not only to calcium homeostasis, neurohormonal functions, and the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. Also, Vitamin D directly or indirectly controls more than 200 genes, including the regulation of proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, and angiogenesis, as well as having an inhibitory effect on cellular proliferation and terminal differentiation.

Vitamin D deficiency is a highly prevalent condition, present in approximately 30% to 50% of the general population. As one of the largest send out test volumes for hospitals, it is evident that clinicians want to know the Vitamin D levels of their patients.

Based on data from the OIG, Medicare reimbursed a total of 8.7 million tests in the amount of 337 million dollars. Some mid-sized hospitals we recently spoke to indicated that every patient who is sick will receive a Vitamin D test. It is not unusual for many hospitals to perform 50-60 tests per day, depending on their patient population. One of the largest send out laboratories we spoke to recently boasted performing 4,500 tests per day!

Vitamin D Analysis Made Simple
This probably isn’t breaking news for you, but Vitamin D is the #1 test that laboratories want to bring in-house and reduce send out volumesread the last blog in this series. LC-MS/MS technology is the gold standard method for testing Vitamin D, offering far greater specificity and accuracy over immunoassay methods. The problem is that LC-MS/MS techniques have traditionally been far too complex for mainstream adoption in clinical diagnostic laboratories.

With 40 years of total devotion to improving the future of scientific discovery and diagnostic accuracy, we simply would not rest until we developed a solution. From the day we launched the first ever commercially successful triple quad in 1981, we have continued to pioneer groundbreaking technologies and earlier this year we were thrilled to unveil the first FDA-cleared (via the de novo pathway) LC-MS/MS based Vitamin D 200M Assay kit, exclusively for the SCIEX Topaz™ System

The FDA-reviewed Topaz System is a fully integrated platform with an IVD assay driven by ClearCore™ MD, the new and intuitive software designed specifically for use in clinical labs. In a nutshell, ClearCore MD ‘Makes Mass Spec Simple’! It is designed for enhanced LDT development, usability and rapid user adoption, regardless of previous LC-MS/MS experience.

Our Vitamin D 200M Assay kit saves months of method development time, empowering the hospital lab to deliver test results with less complexity for the benefit of better patient care.

  • Simple, pre-developed, locked method enables your lab to get up and running quickly
  • Chromatographic separation of the D3 epimers to provide accurate results
  • Extensive interference testing with over 79 compounds to ensure analyte specificity
  • FDA-cleared assay to reduce risk compared to running LDTs

Your Vitamin D samples are ready to run in weeks, not months.

Find out how you can bring Vitamin D testing in-house, save months of method development time and run samples in just weeks with the first FDA-cleared (via the de novo pathway) LC-MS/MS based Vitamin D 200M Assay kit, exclusively for the SCIEX Topaz System.Learn more >

 

Questions and answers to help improve your mycotoxin analysis

During a recent webinar I shared method details for mycotoxin analysis on the SCIEX 7500 system. In this blog i will share the Q&A for the submitted questions that we did not have chance to answer during the live webinar.

A 2-fold revolution: MS approaches for the bioanalysis of oligonucleotide therapeutics

In 1998, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved fomivirsen as the first therapeutic oligonucleotide therapeutic. This approval marked a revolution of mechanism of action discovered decades before finally coming to fruition. Since then, the landscape of chemical modifications of oligonucleotides, conjugations and formulations has evolved tremendously, contributing to improvements in stability, efficacy and safety. Today, more than a dozen antisense oligonucleotides (ASOs) and small interfering RNA (siRNA) drugs are on the market, most of which are designated as orphan drugs for treating rare genetic diseases.

Is “right first time, every time” a pipedream for metabolite identification by LC-MS?

If we lived in an ideal world, it would be possible to unambiguously identify metabolites using a single analytical experiment. This analytical technique would need to be efficient and easily generate the information needed from a routine assay that is also robust, enabling confident decision-making during drug discovery.

Posted by

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Wordpress Social Share Plugin powered by Ultimatelysocial