AUTHOR=Chen Ming , Lin Rong-Qi , Mao Yun-Yi , Huang Ying-Bin , Wu Jun-Nan , Li Xue-Yong , Wu Xue-Mei , Cheng Yu , Qiu Hong-Qiang TITLE=Comparison of oxcarbazepine metabolite concentrations measured by EMIT-based Siemens Viva-ProE® system and LC-MS/MS in Chinese patients JOURNAL=Frontiers in Pharmacology VOLUME=Volume 16 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/pharmacology/articles/10.3389/fphar.2025.1697679 DOI=10.3389/fphar.2025.1697679 ISSN=1663-9812 ABSTRACT=BackgroundTherapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) of oxcarbazepine’s active metabolite, the monohydroxy derivative (MHD), is essential for effective seizure management. Although liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) is considered the gold standard for MHD quantification, its technical complexity restricts widespread clinical utility. The Siemens Viva-ProE® System (SVPS), an automated immunoassay platform, presents a promising alternative. However, its comparability with LC-MS/MS warrants thorough and systematic evaluation.ObjectivesThis study established and validated an LC-MS/MS method for quantifying MHD in plasma and assessed the correlation and concordance of SVPS measurements using concentration-specific Deming regression. The objective was to evaluate the feasibility of replacing LC-MS/MS with SVPS for TDM LC-MS/MS in clinical practice.MethodsA validated LC-MS/MS method (linear range: 0.18–39.30 μg/mL; intra/inter-day RSD < 15%) and SVPS (measurable range: 0.00–50.00 μg/mL) were applied to analyze 158 plasma samples. Correlation and concordance between the methods were assessed using Spearman’s correlation, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), linear regression and Deming regression, Bland–Altman analysis, and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. Stratified subgroup analyses, classified as low (<12 μg/mL), medium (12–22 μg/mL), and high (>22 μg/mL) concentration ranges, were conducted to evaluate the clinical acceptability of corrected SVPS values.ResultsSVPS demonstrated a concentration-dependent positive bias (+13.04%) relative to LC-MS/MS. Despite this bias, strong overall correlation and concordance were observed (r = 0.9547, ICC = 0.952; p < 0.001). The overall Deming regression was defined by the equation: [LC-MS/MS] = 0.9763 × [SVPS] – 1.336. After correction, SVPS exhibited clinically acceptable concordance with LC-MS/MS within the low and medium concentration ranges, but not at higher concentrations.ConclusionWhile uncorrected SVPS results exhibit a systematic bias that produces direct interchangeability with LC-MS/MS, applying a concentration-specific Deming correction enables clinically reliable TDM of MHD at concentrations below 22 μg/mL. However, method optimization is still required for accurate quantification in the high-concentration range.