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Test Code ECULI Eculizumab, Serum


Ordering Guidance


Therapeutic drug monitoring of eculizumab may be useful when providers are considering personalized treatment decisions, such as therapy discontinuation of extended dose intervals when patients are in remission states.



Specimen Required


Patient Preparation: Suggest discontinuing natalizumab at least 4 weeks prior to testing for eculizumab quantitation in serum. Patient should consult the healthcare provider who prescribed this drug to determine if discontinuation is an option. If not, ok to proceed with testing while taking natalizumab.

Collection Container/Tube:

Preferred: Red top

Acceptable: Serum gel

Submission Container/Tube: Plastic vial

Specimen Volume: 1 mL

Collection Instructions:

1. Draw blood immediately before next scheduled dose.

2. Immediately after specimen collection, place the tube on wet ice.

3. After specimen has clotted on wet ice, centrifuge at 4° C and aliquot serum into plastic vial.

4. Freeze specimen within 30 minutes of centrifugation. Specimen must be placed on dry ice if not frozen immediately.


Useful For

Assessing the response to eculizumab therapy

 

Assessing the need for dose escalation

 

Evaluating the potential for dose de-escalation or discontinuation of therapy in remission states

 

Monitoring patients who need to be above a certain eculizumab concentration in order to improve the odds of a clinical response for therapy optimization

Method Name

Liquid Chromatography Tandem Mass Spectrometry, High-Resolution Accurate Mass (LC-MS/MS HRAM)

Reporting Name

Eculizumab, S

Specimen Type

Serum

Specimen Minimum Volume

0.5 mL

Specimen Stability Information

Specimen Type Temperature Time Special Container
Serum Frozen (preferred) 30 days
  Refrigerated  28 days
  Ambient  4 days

Reject Due To

Gross hemolysis Reject
Gross lipemia Reject
Gross icterus OK

Clinical Information

Eculizumab (Soliris, Alexion Pharmaceuticals) is a humanized monoclonal IgG2/4 kappa antibody therapeutic directed against complement component 5 (C5). By association with C5, eculizumab inhibits the terminal complement pathway through simultaneous blockade of the generation of the potent prothrombotic and proinflammatory molecule, C5a, and the formation of membrane attack complex initiator, C5b.

 

Eculizumab is administered as an IV infusion. The dosing regimen prescribed for an average adult diagnosed with paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) is 600 mg weekly for the first 4 weeks, followed by 900 mg for the fifth dose 1 week later, and 900 mg every 2 weeks thereafter. Eculizumab has been evaluated in patients with atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS) through 2 prospective, open-label, single-arm studies (C08-002 and C08-003) as well as a single-arm retrospective study. In aHUS, it is prescribed for an average adult at 900 mg weekly for the first 4 weeks, followed by 1200 mg for the fifth dose 1 week later, then 1200 mg every 2 weeks thereafter. Eculizumab was generally well tolerated, and no significant adverse effects were attributed to drug treatment; some adverse reactions included upper respiratory tract infections and diarrhea in prospective and retrospective studies, hypertension, headache, and leucopenia (C08-002/C08-003), and fever (C09-001R). Additional case reports suggest that eculizumab may prevent posttransplantation recurrence of aHUS, even in those patients harboring CFH/CFHR1 hybrid gene variants, who are at very high risk of recurrence. Further research is needed to determine the duration of eculizumab therapy in the context of the genetic background of aHUS cases and risk of disease relapse.

 

Therapeutic drug monitoring of eculizumab is helpful when providers are considering personalized treatment decisions, such as therapy discontinuation or extending dose intervals when patients are in remission states. In PNH, a minimum therapeutic concentration is expected to be above 35 mcg/mL. In aHUS, the therapeutic concentrations are expected to be above 50 to 100 mcg/mL of eculizumab. Complement blockage studies can aid in determining if a therapeutic concentration of the drug has blocked the complement function and subsequent production of sC5b-9. Tests recommended for complement blockage evaluation in eculizumab therapy are the alternative complement pathway (AH50 / Alternative Complement Pathway, Functional, Serum), classical complement pathway (CH50 / Complement, Total, Serum) or C5 function assays. A panel of eculizumab concentration plus AH50 is available; see ECMP / Eculizumab Monitoring Panel, Serum.

Reference Values

Lower limit of quantitation =5.0 mcg/mL

>35 Therapeutic concentration for paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH)

>50 Therapeutic concentration for atypical hemolytic uremic syndrome (aHUS)

Day(s) Performed

Wednesday

Report Available

3 to 9 days

Performing Laboratory

Mayo Clinic Laboratories in Rochester

Test Classification

This test was developed and its performance characteristics determined by Mayo Clinic in a manner consistent with CLIA requirements. It has not been cleared or approved by the US Food and Drug Administration.

CPT Code Information

80299

Forms

If not ordering electronically, complete, print, and send 1 of the following forms with the specimen:

-Renal Diagnostics Test Request (T830)

-Coagulation Test Request (T753)

-Therapeutics Test Request (T831)