Literature DB >> 10926887

Analytical quality of near-patient blood cholesterol and glucose determinations.

M du Plessis1, J B Ubbink, W J Vermaak.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Screening for diabetes and hypercholesterolemia is widely advocated, and extra-laboratory testing could play a major role in cost-effective population screening. We wished to assess the analytical quality and interchangeability of capillary blood cholesterol and glucose assays as performed on near-patient devices in pharmacies in Pretoria, South Africa.
METHODS: Accuracy of near-patient and laboratory analyzers was assessed by analyses of human-serum-based reference material. To assess interchangeability in routine use, six volunteers visited each of 12 randomly selected pharmacies consecutively during a 3-week period to have their fasting blood glucose and cholesterol concentrations determined. For comparison purposes, a similar procedure was followed to evaluate the eight clinical chemistry laboratories servicing Pretoria and surroundings.
RESULTS: The analytical performances in our laboratory of a single point-of-care instrument and of a laboratory analyzer compared well. Nevertheless, between-pharmacy analytical variation was larger than between-laboratory variation (11% vs 6.1% for cholesterol; 10% vs 7.6% for glucose). For glucose measurements, near-patient testing in pharmacies demonstrated a bias of -48.1% to 16.2%, whereas bias for laboratory measurements was -1.0% to 7.4%. Cholesterol assays showed a bias of -5.6% to 16.6% in pharmacies compared with -10.6% to 3.7% in laboratories. The percentage of closeness to the homeostatic set point for a single glucose and cholesterol determination done in any pharmacy was 24.6% and 23.6%, respectively. The corresponding values for laboratories were 16.9% and 15.6%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: Although modern point-of-care instruments allow high-quality blood analyses under ideal conditions, performance goals often are not achieved in practice as indicated by a higher uncertainty of cholesterol and glucose blood results when determined in pharmacies. Nonuniformity of calibration procedures, deficiencies in training, a lack of internal quality control, and the absence of an external quality assessment program may all contribute to the current state of affairs.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10926887

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chem        ISSN: 0009-9147            Impact factor:   8.327


  1 in total

Review 1.  Measurement of cholesterol in plasma and other body fluids.

Authors:  G R Warnick; A T Remaley
Journal:  Curr Atheroscler Rep       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 5.113

  1 in total

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