Analytical performance of 17 general chemistry analytes across countries and across manufacturers in the INPUtS project of EQA organizers in Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, United Kingdom and Spain

Background: Optimum patient care in relation to laboratory medicine is achieved when results of laboratory tests are equivalent, irrespective of the analytical platform used or the country where the laboratory is located. Standardization and harmonization minimize differences and the success of efforts to achieve this can be monitored with international category 1 external quality assessment (EQA) programs. Methods: An EQA project with commutable samples, targeted with reference measurement procedures (RMPs) was organized by EQA institutes in Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, UK, and Spain. Re... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Weykamp, Cas
Secchiero, Sandra
Thelen, Marc
Cobbaert, Christa
Thomas, Annette
Jassam, Nuthar
Barth, Julian H.
Perich, Carmen
Ricós, Carmen
Faria, Ana Paula
PLEBANI, MARIO
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2017
Verlag/Hrsg.: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Schlagwörter: commutability / external quality assessment / general chemistry / reference measurement procedure / total terror / Calcium / Chloride / Cholesterol / Enzyme / Glucose / Human / Netherland / Portugal / Potassium / Sodium / Spain / United Kingdom / Uric Acid / Blood Chemical Analysi / Clinical Biochemistry / Biochemistry (medical)
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-29198125
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3228687

Background: Optimum patient care in relation to laboratory medicine is achieved when results of laboratory tests are equivalent, irrespective of the analytical platform used or the country where the laboratory is located. Standardization and harmonization minimize differences and the success of efforts to achieve this can be monitored with international category 1 external quality assessment (EQA) programs. Methods: An EQA project with commutable samples, targeted with reference measurement procedures (RMPs) was organized by EQA institutes in Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, UK, and Spain. Results of 17 general chemistry analytes were evaluated across countries and across manufacturers according to performance specifications derived from biological variation (BV). Results: For K, uric acid, glucose, cholesterol and high-density density (HDL) cholesterol, the minimum performance specification was met in all countries and by all manufacturers. For Na, Cl, and Ca, the minimum performance specifications were met by none of the countries and manufacturers. For enzymes, the situation was complicated, as standardization of results of enzymes toward RMPs was still not achieved in 20% of the laboratories and questionable in the remaining 80%. Conclusions: The overall performance of the measurement of 17 general chemistry analytes in European medical laboratories met the minimum performance specifications. In this general picture, there were no significant differences per country and no significant differences per manufacturer. There were major differences between the analytes. There were six analytes for which the minimum quality specifications were not met and manufacturers should improve their performance for these analytes. Standardization of results of enzymes requires ongoing efforts.