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MASS-FIX for the detection of monoclonal proteins and light chain N-glycosylation in routine clinical practice: a cross-sectional study of 6315 patients.

Patrick W MellorsSurendra DasariMindy C KohlhagenTaxiarchis V KourelisRonald S GoEli MuchtarMorie A GertzShaji K KumarFrancis K BuadiMaria A V WillrichJohn A LustPrashant KapoorMartha Q LacyDavid DingliYi HwaAmie FonderMiriam HobbsSusan HaymanRahma WarsameNelson R LeungYi LinWilson GonsalvesMustaqeem A SiddiquiRobert A KyleSundararajan Vincent RajkumarDavid L MurrayAngela Dispenzieri
Published in: Blood cancer journal (2021)
Immunoenrichment-based matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS), termed MASS-FIX, offers several advantages over immunofixation for the detection and isotyping of serum monoclonal protein, including superior sensitivity and specificity, the ability to differentiate therapeutic monoclonal antibodies, and the rapid identification of light chain (LC) N-glycosylation. We identified 6315 patients with MASS-FIX performed at our institution since 2018. Of these, 4118 patients (65%) with a wide array of plasma cell disorders (PCD), including rare monoclonal gammopathies of clinical significance, had a positive MASS-FIX. Two-hundred twenty-one (5%) of the MASS-FIX positive patients had evidence of LC N-glycosylation, which was more commonly identified in IgM heavy chain isotype, kappa LC isotype, and in diagnoses of immunoglobulin light chain (AL) amyloidosis and cold agglutinin disease (CAD) compared to other PCD. This cross-sectional study describes the largest cohort of patients to undergo MASS-FIX in routine clinical practice. Our findings demonstrate the widespread utility of this assay, and confirm that LC N-glycosylation should prompt suspicion for AL amyloidosis and CAD in the appropriate clinical context.
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