After 60 min of incubation at room temperature, the plates were washed three times and 100 μL of ortho-phenylenediamine substrate (OPD; Dako) containing H2O2, (4 OPD tablets were dissolved in 12 mL Tanespimycin concentration water and 5 μL 25% H2O2 was added just before use) was added to each well. After incubation for 18 min at room temperature, the reaction was stopped by adding 100 μL of 0.5 m H2SO4 (Merck, Whitehouse Station, NJ, USA) to each well. The optical density (OD)
in the wells was read at 490 nm wavelength using a Tecan Infinity F200 plate reader (Tecan, Männedorf, Switzerland). Samples from 10 healthy individuals, a positive control sample and two blank controls (quench buffer instead of sample) were analysed on each plate. All samples were run in duplicate and the mean OD was calculated after subtraction of the mean OD of the blank control. The cut-off for positivity was calculated based on the mean and +3 standard deviation (SD) of the 10 healthy individuals. Thus, on each plate, the OD readings are expressed as no. of SD above the mean of the 10 healthy individuals, AZD3965 molecular weight which results in a plate-specific cut-off that defines a positive sample. This is a necessary measure to avoid differences in classifications, as the absolute optical density
will vary between test runs. To approve a test run, the positive control sample had to be within
specified limits (95 percentile based on repeated measurements). To be classified as NNA in this study, a positive sample has to be positive on at least two independent test runs. To control for antibody specificity, the positive samples were mixed with excess antigen prior to the analysis. This was performed by pre-incubating the 1/100 diluted plasma sample for 2 h at 37°C with 0.5 μg of recombinant FVIII in a volume 200 μL. After incubation, the samples were re-analysed with ELISA assay according to the protocol described above. For four samples with a remaining positive, although significantly medchemexpress weaker, signal after pre-incubation with soluble FVIII, and for seven samples not assayed with pre-incubation with soluble FVIII, Protein G Sepharose adsorption was performed to decide if the positive signal was dependent on IgG in the sample or not. Five-hundred microlitre of Protein G Sepharose (Fast Flow; GE Healthcare, Uppsala, Sweden) was mixed with 100 μL plasma and 400 μL of quench buffer (see above) and incubated at room temperature for 2 h on a platform rotator. After incubation, the solution was diluted in quench buffer to reach a final plasma concentration of 1/100. The ELISA assay was then performed as described above.