Perchlorate interference with electrolyte analysis

The clinical chemist has a pivotal role in recognizing analytical interference of medication in diagnostic laboratory assays [1, 2]. Timely signaling of interference can lead to a reduction in diagnostic errors and therefore to increasedpatient safety andquality of care. In our hospital, a 26-year-old man presented with amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis (TSH<0.015 mIU/L, FT4>77 pmol/L), for which a combined therapy of thiamazole (Strumazol 30 mg, one time each day) and sodium perchlorate (500 mg, two times each day) was started (written consent was obtained from the patient). Soon afterward unexplainably low sodium (Na+) and ionized calcium (Ca2+) concentrations were obtained, which prompted the endocrinologist to contact the laboratory, not sure whether electrolyte treatment should be started. The concentrations, measured on the RAPIDPoint 500 blood gas analyzer (Siemens Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany), were highly discrepant with the results of the AU5811 chemistry analyzer (Beckman–Coulter, Brea, CA, USA). Na+ levels were about 10 mmol/L lower at RAPIDPoint 500 (Figure 1). In addition, ionized Ca2+ levels as low as 0.5 mmol/L (reference interval: 1.15–1.32 mmol/L) were reported, while total calcium levels were normal. Perchlorate is a potent competitive inhibitor of the sodium/iodide symporter, which is used in the perchlorate discharge test to identify organification defects and for treating amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis type I [3]. Interference of perchlorate with ionized Ca2+ measurements has been described before for several blood gas analyzers, but no effects on Na+ levels were mentioned [4, 5]. Therefore, we compared electrolyte measurements at RAPIDPoint 500 and AU5811 in the presence of a range of perchlorate concentrations. As many wards in our hospital rely on i-STAT point-of-care analyzers (Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, IL, USA) for electrolyte measurements, we also included this analyzer in our comparison. Sodium perchlorate concentrations in vivo depend on dose, intake frequency, distribution volume and kidney function. In 11 patients receiving perchlorate, plasma concentrations ranging from 0.031 to 2.75 mmol/L were obtained by Gruber et al. using a perchlorate-selective electrode [5]. Therefore, we decided to analyze sodium, potassium (K+), chloride (Cl) and calcium (RAPIDPoint/iSTAT: ionized Ca2+; AU5811: total calcium) levels in the presence of perchlorate with plasma concentrations ranging from 0.05 to 4 mmol/L (sodium perchlorate was dissolved and diluted). We used pooled anonymous leftover blood samples (BD Vacutainer lithium heparin 4.0 mL) for which a maximal pH difference of 0.05 within 1 dilution series (max. 0.03 mmol/L ionized Ca2+) was allowed. RAPIDPoint 500 and i-STAT analyses were performed inwhole blood,whileAU5811 analyseswere carried out in derived plasma. The measured Na+ levels were corrected for the added amount as part of sodium perchlorate. Perchlorate levels of 1 mmol/L and higher induced clinically significant decreases of the Na+ concentration whenmeasured on RAPIDPoint 500 (Figure 2A). At 4 mmol/ L, perchlorate caused 11.5 mmol/L (8.2%) reduction of the Na+ concentration (Supplementary Figure 1A). Na+ measurements at i-STAT and AU5811, however, were hardly influenced by perchlorate. Cl levels at RAPIDPoint 500 significantly increased in response to perchlorate, with a maximal increase of 21.3 mmol/L, while AU5811 Cl levels only showed a minor rise (Figure 2B, Supplementary Figure 1B). Perchlorate interference with i-STAT Cl analysis was not investigated, because the CG8+ cartridge used in *Corresponding author: Dr. Stijn J.A. Aper, Central Diagnostic Laboratory (CDL), University Medical Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands; and Laboratory for Clinical Chemistry, Hematology and Immunology (KCHI), Diakonessenhuis, Bosboomstraat 1, 3582 KE, Utrecht, The Netherlands, Phone: +31882506958, Fax: +31882506618, E-mail: saper@diakhuis.nl; s.j.a.aper-2@umcutrecht.nl Evelien F.H.I. Peeters: Department of Endocrinology, University Medical Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands Albert Huisman, Eef G.W.M. Lentjes and Ruben E.A. Musson: Central Diagnostic Laboratory (CDL), University Medical Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands. https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2291-2487 (A. Huisman) Clin Chem Lab Med 2021; 59(3): e117–e119

To the Editor, The clinical chemist has a pivotal role in recognizing analytical interference of medication in diagnostic laboratory assays [1,2]. Timely signaling of interference can lead to a reduction in diagnostic errors and therefore to increased patient safety and quality of care. In our hospital, a 26-year-old man presented with amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis (TSH<0.015 mIU/L, FT4>77 pmol/L), for which a combined therapy of thiamazole (Strumazol 30 mg, one time each day) and sodium perchlorate (500 mg, two times each day) was started (written consent was obtained from the patient). Soon afterward unexplainably low sodium (Na + ) and ionized calcium (Ca 2+ ) concentrations were obtained, which prompted the endocrinologist to contact the laboratory, not sure whether electrolyte treatment should be started. The concentrations, measured on the RAPIDPoint 500 blood gas analyzer (Siemens Healthineers, Erlangen, Germany), were highly discrepant with the results of the AU5811 chemistry analyzer (Beckman-Coulter, Brea, CA, USA). Na + levels were about 10 mmol/L lower at RAPIDPoint 500 ( Figure 1). In addition, ionized Ca 2+ levels as low as 0.5 mmol/L (reference interval: 1.15-1.32 mmol/L) were reported, while total calcium levels were normal.
Perchlorate is a potent competitive inhibitor of the sodium/iodide symporter, which is used in the perchlorate discharge test to identify organification defects and for treating amiodarone-induced thyrotoxicosis type I [3]. Interference of perchlorate with ionized Ca 2+ measurements has been described before for several blood gas analyzers, but no effects on Na + levels were mentioned [4,5]. Therefore, we compared electrolyte measurements at RAPIDPoint 500 and AU5811 in the presence of a range of perchlorate concentrations. As many wards in our hospital rely on i-STAT point-of-care analyzers (Abbott Laboratories, Chicago, IL, USA) for electrolyte measurements, we also included this analyzer in our comparison.
Sodium perchlorate concentrations in vivo depend on dose, intake frequency, distribution volume and kidney function. In 11 patients receiving perchlorate, plasma concentrations ranging from 0.031 to 2.75 mmol/L were obtained by Gruber et al. using a perchlorate-selective electrode [5]. Therefore, we decided to analyze sodium, potassium (K + ), chloride (Cl − ) and calcium (RAPIDPoint/i-STAT: ionized Ca 2+ ; AU5811: total calcium) levels in the presence of perchlorate with plasma concentrations ranging from 0.05 to 4 mmol/L (sodium perchlorate was dissolved and diluted). We used pooled anonymous leftover blood samples (BD Vacutainer lithium heparin 4.0 mL) for which a maximal pH difference of 0.05 within 1 dilution series (max. 0.03 mmol/L ionized Ca 2+ ) was allowed. RAPIDPoint 500 and i-STAT analyses were performed in whole blood, while AU5811 analyses were carried out in derived plasma. The measured Na + levels were corrected for the added amount as part of sodium perchlorate.
Perchlorate levels of 1 mmol/L and higher induced clinically significant decreases of the Na + concentration when measured on RAPIDPoint 500 (Figure 2A). At 4 mmol/ L, perchlorate caused 11.5 mmol/L (8.2%) reduction of the Na + concentration (Supplementary Figure 1A). Na + measurements at i-STAT and AU5811, however, were hardly influenced by perchlorate. Cl − levels at RAPIDPoint 500 significantly increased in response to perchlorate, with a maximal increase of 21.3 mmol/L, while AU5811 Cl − levels only showed a minor rise ( Figure 2B, Supplementary Figure 1B). Perchlorate interference with i-STAT Cl − analysis was not investigated, because the CG8+ cartridge used in our hospital for electrolyte and blood gas analyses does not support Cl − measurement. The cartridge that includes the Cl − electrode (EC8+) is not in use in our country. The large effect of perchlorate on ionized Ca 2+ measurements using RAPIDPoint 500 was similar to that reported before for related Siemens blood gas analyzers ( Figure 2C, Supplementary Figure 1C) [4,5]. The i-STAT ionized Ca 2+ measurements were only slightly less affected by perchlorate. AU5811 total calcium levels were stable over all perchlorate levels (Supplementary Figure 2). K + was found to be the least perchlorate-sensitive parameter of RAP-IDPoint 500, although 4 mmol/L perchlorate induced a 5.4% decrease ( Figure 2D, Supplementary Figure 1D). i-STAT K + levels showed a larger reduction (6.9%), while AU5811 measurements remained fully stable. The interference of perchlorate with electrolyte analysis at RAPIDPoint 500 was observed despite the so-called "retrocal" mode (internal compensation mechanism of the blood gas analyzer when possible interference is detected) being active.
If a patient receives perchlorate therapy, the i-STAT is a good alternative for RAPIDPoint 500 to measure Na + levels using the commonly applied CG8+ cartridge. In addition, all studied electrolytes can be reliably measured on AU5811, with the exception of Cl − in the presence of 4 mmol/L perchlorate. For calcium, measurement of the total level on AU5811 is the most reliable option. Alternatively, a perchlorate-insensitive direct ISE (ion-selective Figure 1: Na + levels measured for the patient described in the introductory paragraph receiving sodium perchlorate. Sodium perchlorate therapy was started 5 days before the first Na + measurement was performed (on day 0), and was continued till day 6. Measurements were performed at RAPIDPoint 500, i-STAT and AU5811. Sodium perchlorate concentrations are reported as plasma levels (corrected for hematocrit as spiking was performed in whole blood). All values are presented as means of measured concentrations ± SEM (standard error of mean) from n=3 independent experiments. e118 electrode) method may be used [5]. In contrast to many other situations (e. g., pseudohyponatremia), analysis using indirect ISE is less sensitive to perchlorate than some direct ISE methods, probably because its 10× dilution step decreases the amount of perchlorate in the measuring cell. Up to now, however, there is no evidence that Na + and Cl − analyses of other direct ISE methods are susceptible to perchlorate interference.
The RAPIDPoint 500 Na + and Cl − electrodes were found to be fairly sensitive to perchlorate. Interestingly, in previous reports no effect of perchlorate on Na + or Cl − measurements of Siemens RAPIDPoint 405, RAPIDLab 405 and RAPIDLab 865 blood gas analyzers was mentioned [4,5]. Only a few substances were reported to interfere with Na + measurements on blood gas analyzers, such as benzalkonium heparin and nortriptyline [6,7]. The interference of nortriptyline was only observed for RAPIDPoint 500 and was specific for Na + [7]. The authors suggested that the Na + -selective ionophore in the membrane of the electrode was also susceptible to nortriptyline. Selectivity issues of Cl − electrodes containing quaternary ammonium or phosphonium salts as anion exchangers are a known phenomenon. The selectivity of the Cl − electrode is determined by the relative free solvation energy, which is more favorable for anions with a higher polarizability or lipophilicity such as bromide, iodide, nitrate, thiocyanate, salicylate and bicarbonate [8]. As part of medication these components can lead to falsely increased Cl − levels. Perchlorate, being much more lipophilic than chloride, can also interfere with potentiometric Cl − analysis [9]. These selectivity issues may have caused the observed perchlorate interference on Na + and Cl − analyses, although the exact composition of RAP-IDPoint 500 electrodes is unknown.
Perchlorate interference leads to a combined decrease of Na + and increase of Cl − levels when measured at RAPIDPoint 500, which makes a calculated anion gap highly unreliable. Even a negative anion gap may be obtained, but more subtle, a falsely declined anion gap may hide the presence of a clinically relevant anion fraction. Only sequential analysis of the electrolyte concentrations using different analyzers or measurement of the osmolality will reveal the erroneous result. Moreover, inappropriate correction of electrolyte levels can negatively impact patients' health. Therefore, knowing the sensitivity of each of the electrolyte analyzers on one's laboratory to perchlorate is highly relevant.
Based on our perchlorate titration data, the patient's in vivo sodium perchlorate plasma concentration probably was ∼4 mmol/L. This level is higher than found before, and much higher than ∼0.3 mmol/L which can be calculated from a 1,000 mg dose each day and distribution volume of 0.34 L/kg [5,10]. As perchlorate is excreted by the kidneys (half-life≈7.5 h), the high in vivo concentration may be related to the decreased kidney function of the patientknown with Becker muscular dystrophywho was suffering from myositis during the thyrotoxic phase [10].
Research funding: None declared. Author contributions: All authors have accepted responsibility for the entire content of this manuscript and approved its submission.