Evidence for the Investigation Protocol
In all recent studies the addition of serum Freelite assays to SPE as a first line test increased the detection of B cell dyscrasia.
A prospective analysis in a veterans population, published in Spring 2006 showed adoption of the Freelite plus SPEP protocol resulted in the additional detection of 15 Multiple Myeloma, 1 lymphoma and 1 patient with bladder transitional cell carcinoma.1
Further evidence from a prospective study of 1003 serum samples published in August 2005, indicated detection increased by 56% when Freelite assays were added to CZE.2
Shortly after that, (December 2005), Freelite assays were shown to be "...significantly more sensitive for detecting monoclonal FLC than urine IFE analysis".3
Using data from retrospective studies4-7, the table below shows the "pick up" rate for all Multiple Myeloma, AL amyloidosis, Light Chain Multiple Myeloma and Nonsecretory Multiple Myeloma using different combinations of screening tests.
It can be seen that the optimal pick up rate for all paraproteins can be achieved using simply SPE or CZE and Freelite.
This screening strategy replaces the need for urine testing
| Protocols | % of Paraproteins detected | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| *Myeloma | AL | LCMM | NSMM | |
| SPE/CZE alone | 90 | 50 | 45 | 0 |
| SPE/CZE, serum IFE | 95 | 70 | 75 | 0 |
| SPE/CZE and UPE | 95 | 75 | 90 | 0 |
| SPE/CZE, UPE serum and urine IFE | 97 | 90 | 95 | 0 |
| FLC alone | 96 | 98 | 100 | 82 |
| SPE/CZE and FLC | 99 | 98 | 100 | 82 |
| SPE/CZE, FLC and serum IFE | 99 | 98 | 100 | 82 |
| *Myeloma is inclusive of samples from patients identified with Intact Immunoglobulin Multiple Myeloma, Light Chain Multiple Myeloma and Nonsecretory Multiple Myeloma. | ||||
Replacement of urine tests
Two recently published studies indicate clearly that if you replace urine Bence Jones Protein tests with serum assays including Freelite free light chains, during the initial investigation for Multiple Myeloma, all patients requiring medical intervention are identified.
"Urine tests are no longer necessary as part of the screening algorithm for identifying monoclonal gammopathies..."8
"..no significant pathology would have been missed by replacing BJP with serum FLCs."9
In a screening study of 923 serum samples seven patients with monoclonal gammopathy and one patient with malignant lymphoma were detected by the presence of an abnormal kappa/lambda ratio among 43 patients who were negative by SPE.9 Importantly, this study also analysed 370 urine samples and the results were compared to corresponding serum FLC results for those patients.

The serum FLC test showed much higher specificity than urine protein electrophoresis. All significant pathology was detected by a combination of serum electrophoresis and serum FLC.9
Initial Investigation Protocol
Clinical Evidence for the Utility of Freelite
Serum Free Light Chain Information Pack
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