Belgian Recommendations for Analytical Verification and Validation of Immunohistochemical Tests in Laboratories of Anatomic Pathology.

peer reviewed ; Analytical verification and validation of immunohistochemical (IHC) tests and their equipment are common practices for today's anatomic pathology laboratories. Few references or guidelines are available on how this should be performed. The study of Sciensano (the Belgian national competent authority regarding licensing of medical laboratories) performed in 2016, demonstrated a significant interlaboratory variation in validation procedures of IHC tests among Belgian laboratories. These results suggest the unavailability of practical information on the approach to the verificatio... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Verbeke, Hannelien
Van Hecke, Donald
Bauraing, Caroline
Dierick, Anne Marie
Colleye, Orphal
Dalle, Ignace
Dewachter, Kathleen
Guiot, Yves
Lequeu, Raphael
Vanderheyden, Nancy
Zwaenepoel, Karen
Croes, Romaric
Dokumenttyp: journal article
Erscheinungsdatum: 2024
Verlag/Hrsg.: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins
Schlagwörter: Humans / Belgium / Immunohistochemistry / Laboratories / Research Design / CE-IVD test / immunohistochemical test / laboratory-developed test / validation / verification / Pathology and Forensic Medicine / Histology / Medical Laboratory Technology / Human health sciences / Laboratory medicine & medical technology / Sciences de la santé humaine / Médecine de laboratoire & technologie médicale
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28941433
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/317908

peer reviewed ; Analytical verification and validation of immunohistochemical (IHC) tests and their equipment are common practices for today's anatomic pathology laboratories. Few references or guidelines are available on how this should be performed. The study of Sciensano (the Belgian national competent authority regarding licensing of medical laboratories) performed in 2016, demonstrated a significant interlaboratory variation in validation procedures of IHC tests among Belgian laboratories. These results suggest the unavailability of practical information on the approach to the verification and validation of these tests. The existing Belgian Practice Guideline for the implementation of a quality management system in anatomic pathology laboratories has been reviewed to meet this demand and, in addition, to prepare the laboratories for the EU-IVD revised regulations (IVDR). This paper describes Belgian recommendations for the verification and validation of IHC tests before implementation, for ongoing validation, and for revalidation. For each type of test (according to the IVDR classification and the origin) and its intended use (purpose), it addresses how to perform analytical verification/validation by recommending: (1) the number of cases in the validation set, (2) the performance characteristics to be evaluated, (3) the objective acceptance criteria, (4) the evaluation method for the obtained results, and (5) how and when to revalidate. A literature study and a risk analysis taking into account the majority of variables regarding verification/validation of methods have been performed, resulting in an expert consensus recommendation that is a compromise among achievability, affordability, and patient safety. This new consensus recommendation has been incorporated in the aforementioned ISO 15189:2012-based Practice Guideline.