Polystyrene collection tubes are not acceptable. Exposure of CSF to polystyrene tubes may result in falsely low Abeta42 concentrations.
These test results should be interpreted in the appropriate clinical context along with other clinical and paraclinical findings. Only through neuropathological assessment of brain tissue can a definitive diagnosis of sporadic prion disease be established.
Some molecular subtypes of prion protein have been reported to have lower detectability by the real-time quaking-induced conversion (RT-QuIC) assay.
Even small quantities of blood in CSF can result in false-negative RT-QuIC results.
The presence of fluorescent substances may interfere with testing and prevent the accurate interpretation of the RT-QuIC assay.
Careful consideration of the differential diagnosis is advised when RT-QuIC test results are unexpectedly negative. Repeat testing with RT-QuIC may be warranted if there is high suspicion of prion disease. A small subset of initially negative cases by RT-QuIC may become positive as the disease progresses. However, a small proportion of patients with definitive prion disease may be persistently negative by RT-QuIC. False-negative RT-QuIC results are most often encountered in cases of genetic prion disease, such as fatal familial insomnia and Gerstmann-Straussler-Scheinker, and in atypical sporadic prion disease subtypes that have slower indolent disease progression.
Improper specimen handling or interindividual differences in overall concentration of Abeta peptide production may yield an abnormally low Abeta42 in the context of a normal p-Tau181/Abeta42 ratio. Results should be interpreted in combination with other clinical information.
Exposure of cerebrospinal fluid to polystyrene tubes can reduce concentrations of the amyloid Abeta42 by as much as 20% to 50% due to adherence of the sticky amyloid protein to polystyrene tube surface material, potentially altering clinical interpretation, including the p-Tau181/Abeta 42 ratio. P-Tau181 and total Tau protein do not substantially adhere to polystyrene collection tubes.
Failure to adhere to the specimen collection instructions provided may result in falsely low Abeta42 concentrations and potential misdiagnosis of Alzheimer disease.
In rare cases, some individuals can develop antibodies to mouse or other animal antibodies (often referred to as human anti-mouse antibodies [HAMA] or heterophile antibodies), which may cause interference in some immunoassays. The presence of antibodies to streptavidin or ruthenium can also rarely occur and may interfere in this assay. Caution should be used in interpretation of results, and the laboratory should be alerted if the result does not correlate with the clinical presentation.