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Comparative Study
. 1997 Sep;18(10):1775-80.
doi: 10.1002/elps.1150181011.

Identification of monoclonal proteins in serum: a quantitative comparison of acetate, agarose gel, and capillary electrophoresis

Affiliations
Comparative Study

Identification of monoclonal proteins in serum: a quantitative comparison of acetate, agarose gel, and capillary electrophoresis

J A Katzmann et al. Electrophoresis. 1997 Sep.

Abstract

A selected group of 308 sera were analyzed by capillary electrophoresis (CE), agarose gel electrophoresis (AGE), and cellulose acetate electrophoresis (CAE) and evaluated for abnormalities that would suggest the presence of a monoclonal protein. The sensitivity (an electrophoretic abnormality in sera that contained a monoclonal protein) and specificity (a normal electrophoretic pattern in sera that did not contain a monoclonal protein) was determined for each electrophoretic procedure. CAE was the most specific procedure and CE was the most sensitive. The increase in sensitivity of CE was primarily due to increased detection of cryoglobulins and free light chains. The quantitation of the gamma region and/or monoclonal antibody peaks by CE was similar to results obtained by AGE. Quantitation of very large monoclonal protein peaks (> 3.0 g/dL) by on-line absorption detection (CE) yielded higher results than quantitation by dye-binding (AGE).

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