Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Objective evaluation of analyzer performance based on a retrospective meta-analysis of instrument validation studies: point-of-care hematology analyzers.
- Journal:
- Veterinary clinical pathology
- Year:
- 2017
- Authors:
- Cook, Andrea M et al.
- Affiliation:
- Department of Clinical Sciences · Germany
Plain-English summary
This study looked at how well certain blood testing machines for pets, called point-of-care analyzers (POCAs), perform. Researchers reviewed past studies to see if these machines made errors when measuring blood components in dogs and cats. They found that most of the measurements were acceptable, but there were issues with measuring hemoglobin (the protein that carries oxygen in the blood) and platelet counts, which were not as reliable. For the white blood cell counts, there were also signs of problems with accuracy. Overall, while most tests met expert standards, some specific measurements did not, suggesting that more careful monitoring of these machines is needed.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Information on quality requirements and objective evaluation of performance of veterinary point-of-care analyzers (POCAs) is scarce. OBJECTIVES: The study was aimed at assessing observed total errors (TEs) for veterinary hematology POCAs via meta-analysis and comparing TEto allowable total error (TE) specifications based on experts' opinions. METHODS: The TEfor POCAs (impedance and laser-based) was calculated based on data from instrument validation studies published between 2006 and 2013 as follows: TE= 2 × CV [%] + bias [%]. The CV was taken from published studies; the bias was estimated from the regression equation at 2 different concentration levels of measurands. To fulfill quality requirements, TEshould be < TE. Measurands were considered as globally acceptable if > 60% of analyzers showed TE< TE. RESULTS: Six studies evaluating 11 analyzers and 5 studies evaluating 5 analyzers were included for canine and feline hematology variables, respectively. For the CBC, TEwas < 15% for canine and < 13% for feline measurands, except for HGB and platelet counts. Measurands of the CBC, excluding differential WBC and platelet counts, and HGB concentration were considered globally acceptable. For most of the cell types in the WBC differential count, TEwas > TE(data from 3 analyzers). CONCLUSION: This meta-analysis is considered a pilot study. Experts' requirements (TE< TE) were fulfilled for most measurands except HGB (due to instrument-related bias for the ADVIA 2120) and platelet counts. Available data on the WBC differential count suggest an analytic bias, so nonstatistical quality control is recommended.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28467597/