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SAL_16057 details
Primary information
SALIDSAL_16057
Biomarker nameInterleukin-26 (IL-26) (Protein AK155)
Biomarker TypeNA
Sampling MethodAge 48-50, Male
Collection MethodStimulated
Analysis MethodMudPIT
Collection SiteWhole Saliva
Disease CategoryHealthy
Disease/ConditionHealthy
Disease SubtypeNA
Fold Change/ ConcentrationNA
Up/DownregulatedNA
ExosomalNA
OrganismHomo sapiens
PMID27243383
Year of Publication2016
Biomarker IDQ9NPH9
Biomarker CategoryProtein
SequenceMLVNFILRCGLLLVTLSLAIAKHKQSSFTKSCYPRGTLSQAVDALYIKAAWLKATIPEDRIKNIRLLKKKTKKQFMKNCQFQEQLLSFFMEDVFGQLQLQGCKKIRFVEDFHSLRQKLSHCISCASSAREMKSITRMKRIFYRIGNKGIYKAISELDILLSWIKKLLESSQ
Title of studyThe Statistical Value of Raw Fluorescence Signal in Luminex xMAP Based Multiplex Immunoassays
Abstract of studyTissue samples (plasma, saliva, serum or urine) from 169 patients classified as either normal or having one of seven possible diseases are analysed across three 96-well plates for the presences of 37 analytes using cytokine inflammation multiplexed immunoassay panels. Censoring for concentration data caused problems for analysis of the low abundant analytes. Using fluorescence analysis over concentration based analysis allowed analysis of these low abundant analytes. Mixed-effects analysis on the resulting fluorescence and concentration responses reveals a combination of censoring and mapping the fluorescence responses to concentration values, through a 5PL curve, changed observed analyte concentrations. Simulation verifies this, by showing a dependence on the mean florescence response and its distribution on the observed analyte concentration levels. Differences from normality, in the fluorescence responses, can lead to differences in concentration estimates and unreliable probabilities for treatment effects. It is seen that when fluorescence responses are normally distributed, probabilities of treatment effects for fluorescence based t-tests has greater statistical power than the same probabilities from concentration based t-tests. We add evidence that the fluorescence response, unlike concentration values, doesn't require censoring and we show with respect to differential analysis on the fluorescence responses that background correction is not required.