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Cancer Epidemiology Biomarkers & Prevention Vol. 8, 147-151, February 1999
© 1999 American Association for Cancer Research

Laboratory Assay Reproducibility of Serum Estrogens in Umbilical Cord Blood Samples1

Atsuko Shibata2, Marion M. Lee and Paul B. Meyer

Departments of Health Research and Policy [A. S.] and Gynecology and Obstetrics [P. B. M.], Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California 94305; and Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143 [M. M. L.]

We evaluated the reproducibility of laboratory assays for umbilical cord blood estrogen levels and its implications on sample size estimation. Specifically, we examined correlation between duplicate measurements of the same blood samples and estimated the relative contribution of variability due to study subject and assay batch to the overall variation in measured hormone levels. Cord blood was collected from a total of 25 female babies(15 Caucasian and 10 Chinese-American) from full-term deliveries at two study sites between March and December 1997. Two serum aliquots per blood sample were assayed, either at the same time or 4 months apart, for estrone, total estradiol, weakly bound estradiol, and sex hormone-binding globulin (SHBG). Correlation coefficients (Pearson’s r) between duplicate measurements were calculated. We also estimated the components of variance for each hormone or protein associated with variation among subjects and variation between assay batches. Pearson’s correlation coefficients were >0.90 for all of the compounds except for total estradiol when all of the subjects were included. The intraclass correlation coefficient, defined as a proportion of the total variance due to between-subject variation, for estrone, total estradiol, weakly bound estradiol, and SHBG were 92, 80, 85, and 97%, respectively. The magnitude of measurement error found in this study would increase the sample size required for detecting a difference between two populations for total estradiol and SHBG by 25 and 3%, respectively.




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Copyright © 1999 by the American Association for Cancer Research.