Laboratory products
GSTS Pathology, a unique joint venture between Guy's and St Thomas' and King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trusts in London, is using Abbott’s ARCHITECT Active-B12 holotranscobalamin assay to provide faster, more effective diagnosis of B12 deficiency for improved patient outcomes. Dr Dominic Harrington, Scientific Director at GSTS Pathology, explained: “There has been a significant growth in clinical demand for vitamin B12 testing over the last few years, yet serum testing of total B12 can be a poor marker of metabolically active B12, which only accounts for around 20% of the total. Evidence indicates that measuring the active form of B12 – holotranscobalamin – is a more reliable marker of a patient’s B12 status, allowing a more accurate diagnosis to be made more quickly and easily.”
“We use the ARCHITECT Active-B12 holotranscobalamin assay as a front line test which, in many cases, could determine straightaway whether the patient is deficient or replete, giving clinicians more confidence in laboratory data. Patients have benefited too; they can receive a definitive diagnosis in a greatly reduced time frame, without the need for numerous repeat tests and before significant clinical signs have developed. We started using the ARCHITECT Active‑B12 holotranscobalamin assay in January 2012, and currently perform between 180 and 200 tests a day. It has been very successful. Ultimately, if we can detect suboptimal states earlier, we have the potential to deliver better care, and to save total healthcare costs over a patient’s lifetime.”