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Comments
by Lee Altenberg. Revised November 14, 2000.
Because
cryoglobulins are thermally unstable, any test that measures the quantity of
cryoglobulins in the blood must be performed immediately at the place where
the blood is sampled. Tests to measure
cryoglobulins can not be sent out to another lab. Even if an
outside laboratory claims to measure cryoglobulins, any samples sent to it
will be invalid because they
cannot be processed according to the necessary steps (below).
In that case, not only will the quantities of cryoglobulins measured be
incorrect, but the test may completely fail to even detect cryoglobulins.
Without accurate measurement of cryoglobulin levels, no correct assessment can
be made of a patient's treatments.
Therefore,
cryoglobulinemia patients must be sure that the
lab where their blood is drawn can itself do the measurement tests
properly. Unfortunately, because of the rarity of cryoglobulinemia, most
physicians are unaware of the requirements for valid cryoglobulin tests.
Fortunately, the Cryocrit test can be performed with the equipment that most
any medical testing laboratory has, and should cost only about $20 per test.
The only item that may not be immediately available is a 37°C incubator to
put the centrifuge inside of. Instead, the centrifuge can be placed in a 37°C
walk-in room.
Below
are the instructions used by a hospital that treats many cryoglobulinemia
patients (the supervisor of the laboratory requested that the identity of the
hospital not be divulged, as the questions they have received regarding
cryocrit measurements have been burdensome).
Disclaimer:
Anyone wishing to authorize the use of the protocol below with human subjects
should ask their physician to contact me (altenber@hawaii.edu),
and I can direct the physician to the laboratory that uses this protocol, and
the physician can initiate any necessary exchange of information. This Web
page is not an official publication and is for information purposes only.
[Transcribed
by Lee Altenberg from the hard copy]
Cryoglobulins
are predominantly immunoglobulin complexes that precipitate out at reduced
temperatures and redissolve at some point as the temperature is raised. They
are classically said to precipitate at 4°C and redissolve at 37°C. However,
these two temperatures are generalizations and varying temperatures are
actually observed. The name cryoglobulin is descriptive, since they are
observed at cold (cryo) temperatures and involve immunoglobulins as the sole
or one of the major components. Other proteins may be involved such as
hepatitis B antigen, hepatitis C, fibrinogen, DNA, bovine serum albumen, and
complement components (Freedman, 1971, p. 619).
The
following is primarily a list of physiochemical and immunochemical
characteristics given by McIntosh and Grey (Miescher and
Muller-Eberhard, 1976, pp. 619-622).
The
conditions under which cryoprecipitation occurs vary from one protein to the
next. ``The most important variables appear to be temperature, protein
concentration, pH and ionic strength. Under physiologic conditions of pH and
ionic strength, protein concentration is the most important factor in
determining the temperature at which a particular cryoglobulin will
precipitate. In general, the higher the protein concentration, the higher the
temperature at which precipitation occurs. The critical temperature for
cryoprecipitation varies widely. Cryoprecipitation may occur close to body
temperature, whereas in other cases cryoprecipitation does not occur above 5°C.''
(Immunopathology has observed one cryoglobulin that precipitated slightly at
37°C and produced a considerable precipitate at 35.5°C.)
``The
physical characteristics of the cryoprecipitate also differs from one protein
to the next; in some cases a gelatinous precipitate is formed, whereas in
others it is flocculent and in some cases crystalline. Also, the form of the
precipitate may vary within a given cryoglobulin depending upon the pH and
ionic strength conditions used during the cyroprecipitation.''
Cryoglobulin
can be placed into three general types based on immunoglobulin compositions.
1.
MONOCLONAL
(pure) = one homogeneous immunoglobulin present in the cryoprecipitate. (e.g.,
only monoclonal IgM Kappa present). Usually found in multiple myeloma,
Waldenstrom's macroglobulinemia and lymphoma.
``Any
of the major immunoglobulin classes may be found in each of these three types,
and Bence-Jones proteins have also been observed in the monoclonal type. In
some cases it may be difficult to distinguish between the first two types of
cryoglobulinemia, since in many instances a monoclonal protein is the major
component present in the mixed type and the polyclonal component may be missed
if very careful antigenic analysis is not carried out.'' (Freedman,
1971, p. 619).
Disease
States
Cryoglobulins
are described in many clinical conditions such as lymphoproliferative
disorders, viral infections, and connective tissue diseases. Physical findings
on patients with cryoglobulinemia may include purpura, vasculitis with
multisystem involvement, glomerulonephritis, synovitis with joint swelling and
pain and serositis-pleural effusion and pain (Nakamura,
1974, p. 168).
1.
Centrifuge
at 37°C.
A small table top centrifuge in a large 37° incubator will work.
FTA
Hemagglutination buffer
·
Reconstitute
by directions on container (the amounts vary slightly from one batch to
another).
0.05
M Phosphate buffer, pH 7.0 – Wash Buffer
·
160
ml FTA Hemagglutination Buffer.
Cryoglobulins
come out of solution below body temperature.
Serum must be obtained from clotted blood maintained at body temperature, from
time of withdrawal.
If blood is kept at lower temperatures, the cryoprecipitate may centrifuge out
with the blood clot.
The
following procedure must be followed or the specimen is NOT
acceptable.
1.
CAUTION:
Specimen is not acceptable when drawn on a patient receiving heparin
or any other anti-coagulant.
When
a Dialysis/Apheresis patient has a catheter with heparin, 10 ml or more must
be wasted (discarded) before specimen for Cryoglobulin is drawn.
Peripheral stick is preferred.
(Heparin
is anti-Complementary and will therefore breakdown the Cryo immune complexes
which contain complement producing a false negative or reduced Cryocrit.)
Other anti-coagulants chelate Ca and deplete complement
a.
Select
a receptacle that will maintain a fairly constant temperature.
(Patient's styrofoam pitchers with lids work very well)
1.
Blood
received in the lab must be at 37° to 41°C.
If
it is at any other temperature:
Reject the specimen. It must be redrawn (see specimen collection section).
a.
Spin
again in 37°C centrifuge/2000 rpm/5 min. (to make sure all RBC's and fibrin
are spun out).
If
question possible RBC's after 2nd spin – spin a third time.
(Careful not to over heat specimen)
o
Two
15 ml graduated centrifuge tubes.
.
There
should be 4ml or more of serum in each tube.
Less can be accepted but, if there is any question on the results, a larger
specimen may be required.
Place
other tubes in their appropriate rack for test ordered and/or in stock
freezer.
7.
NOTE:
When cryoglobulin is positive and other Immunopath tests
ordered:
8.
Run
all other tests on the properly collected and handled at 37°C specimen.
(Antibody activity could be tied up in the cryoprecipitate)
9.
EXCEPT
– do NOT run a specimen with cryoglobulin in the ARRAY. For
the Array – use supernatant off of the cryo, or serum from a routine
collection and spin the serum again just before placing on the Array.
1.
Cryoprecipitation
can start within an hour or take several days.
Observe
the specimen daily for up to 5 days.
If there is a question at any step, consult supervisor.
a.
Centrifuge
the control tube at 4°C/2000 rpm/10 min.
If a precipitate does not form, report as Negative at 5 days.
If
a precipitate does not dissolve, report as Negative at 5 days.
If
precipitate reforms, report as Positive.
a.
Place
Control tube in 37° waterbath.
Check
at about 1-4 hours.*
If it clears – place tube back at 4°C.
If precipitate reforms, report as Positive.
Note
#1.
Some
cryoglobulin must be warmed to greater than 37°C to dissolve.
If a definite flocculent cloudiness is seen which does not redissolve when
placed at 37°C for overnight, perform the following:
f.
Set
up a pan of water on hot plate.
Start with 37°C water.
Never
heat past 63°C for 3 minutes.
Note
#2.
Rarely
a precipitate will appear to partially redissolve when placed at 37°C.
(There could be a small cryoglobulin and a little fibrin)
j.
Spin
control tube which has been at 37°C for overnight, in 37°C centrifuge for 8
minutes.
Cryocrit
will have to be estimated from this tube.
Note
#3.
If,
for some reason there is still a questionable cryoglobulin, set up the
Immunofixation (see Characterization – Immunofixation).
If
immunoglobulins are present and albumin absent in the precipitate the
cryoglobulin is Positive.
If
no immunoglobulins are present, the cryoglobulin is Negative.
a.
Spin
cryocrit tube at 2000 rpm/4°C/10 min.
(Large
cryocrits need 30 minutes to sufficiently pack)
7.
We
have seen a rare atypical Cryocrit which will not spin down after 30 min/2000
rpm. This is apparent because there will be an obviously false high Crit
(e.g.: 50%) after the 30 min. spin.
When this is seen, take the following steps:
o
Check
for fibrin.
If fibrin is present, remove the fibrin and re-spin for 30 min.
e.g.:
Total serum = 2 ml, Crit = 0.15 ml, 0.15/2.00 X 100 = 7.5% Cryocrit
10.
Run
RF to see if the cryoprecipitate contains Rheumatoid factor
(anti-immunoglobulins) activity.
.
Centrifuge
the 4°C ``test'' tube at 2000 rpm/4°C/8 minutes.
Draw off supernatant serum and place into another tube and label as ``Super''.
Label the tube with the centrifuged precipitate as ``Precip''.
See
HRE/IFE Procedure Manual – ``Immunofixation for Cryoglobulin by Beckman
Paragon'' procedure.
NEGATIVE
– REPORT
ALL
POSITIVE CRYOGLOBULINS:
Consult
supervisor or director before putting out final reports.
Write
up all results on Cryo Patient sheets.
File
the Cryo Patient sheets in the Cryo notebook.
FOLLOW-UP
CRYOCRITS
Report
repetitive follow-up cryocrits on known positives at 24 hours.
Record
results on Cryo Patient sheets.
Complement
Dependence
can be determined.
a.
Spin
an aliquot of the 4°C specimen.
If
precipitate reforms, cryoglobulin is not complement dependent.
If
it does no reform, it is complement dependent.
If
it partially reforms (precipitate forms, but is below the ring from step b.),
then it is partially complement dependent.
1.
Bloch,
Durt J., ``Cryoglobulinemia and Hepatitis C Virus,'' New
England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 327, pp 1521-1522, November 19,
1992.