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Monitoring therapy in canine malignant lymphoma and leukemia with serum thymidine kinase 1 activity - evaluation of a new, fully automated non-radiometric assay

Authors:
Henrik P. Von Euler, Patricio Rivera, Anne-Charlotte Aronsson, Christer Bengtsson, Lars-Olof Hansson, Staffan K. Eriksson

Affiliations:
Center of Clinical Comparative Oncology (C3O), Department of Clinical Sciences, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine and Animal Science, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), SE-750 07 Uppsala, Sweden. henrik.von.euler@kv.slu.se

Doi:
10.3892/ijo_00000175

Pages:
505-510

Abstract:

Thymidine kinase 1 (TK), which is involved in the synthesis of DNA precursors, is only expressed in S-G2 cells. Serum TK levels correlate to the proliferative activity of tumor disease. Determinations of TK levels have so far relied on radio enzyme assay (REA) and experimental ELISA methods, which have limited the clinical use of this biomarker, although recent studies in dogs with malignant lymphoma (ML) demonstrate its wide potential. A non-radiometric method based on a competitive immunoassay with specific anti-3'-azido-deoxythymidine monophosphate (AZTMP) antibodies has been further developed into the fully automated Liaison TK assay (DiaSorin). Sera from healthy dogs (n=30), and dogs with leukemia (LEUK) (n=35), ML (n=84), non-hematological tumors (n=50), and inflammatory disease (n=14) were tested using both methods. Lymphoma and LEUK samples were available before and during chemotherapy. The coefficients of variation for the Liaison TK assay in this study were 6.3 and 3.4% (low/high TK, respectively), and the correlation between TK REA (X) and the Liaison TK assay (Y) was y=0.9203x + 1.3854 (R2=0.9501). The TK1 levels measured during chemotherapy gave very clear differences between dogs in complete remission and dogs out of remission. A Tukey-Kramer analysis showed that all LEUKs and MLs out of remission differed significantly from the other groups. The Liaison TK assay showed high precision, high sensitivity and a good correlation to the TK REA. The Liaison TK assay provides valuable clinical information in the treatment and management of canine LEUK and ML, with a potential to be further validated in human trials.

OPEN ACCESS ARTICLE

International Journal of Oncology

February 2009
Volume 34 Number 2


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