| Literature DB >> 21080166 |
C M Britten1, S Janetzki, S H van der Burg, C Huber, M Kalos, H I Levitsky, H T Maecker, C J M Melief, J O'Donnell-Tormey, K Odunsi, L J Old, G Pawelec, B O Roep, P Romero, A Hoos, M M Davis.
Abstract
Many assays to evaluate the nature, breadth, and quality of antigen-specific T cell responses are currently applied in human medicine. In most cases, assay-related protocols are developed on an individual laboratory basis, resulting in a large number of different protocols being applied worldwide. Together with the inherent complexity of cellular assays, this leads to unnecessary limitations in the ability to compare results generated across institutions. Over the past few years a number of critical assay parameters have been identified which influence test performance irrespective of protocol, material, and reagents used. Describing these critical factors as an integral part of any published report will both facilitate the comparison of data generated across institutions and lead to improvements in the assays themselves. To this end, the Minimal Information About T Cell Assays (MIATA) project was initiated. The objective of MIATA is to achieve a broad consensus on which T cell assay parameters should be reported in scientific publications and to propose a mechanism for reporting these in a systematic manner. To add maximum value for the scientific community, a step-wise, open, and field-spanning approach has been taken to achieve technical precision, user-friendliness, adequate incorporation of concerns, and high acceptance among peers. Here, we describe the past, present, and future perspectives of the MIATA project. We suggest that the approach taken can be generically applied to projects in which a broad consensus has to be reached among scientists working in fragmented fields, such as immunology. An additional objective of this undertaking is to engage the broader scientific community to comment on MIATA and to become an active participant in the project.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21080166 PMCID: PMC3029829 DOI: 10.1007/s00262-010-0940-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Immunol Immunother ISSN: 0340-7004 Impact factor: 6.968
Factors of success
| Factors of success for MI projects |
|---|
| Technically precise (captures all essential information of the assay) |
| User-friendly (truly minimal and clearly understandable) |
| No existing concerns to prevent conforming |
| Accepted by peers |
| Added value to user/community |
Fig. 1Pathway for achieving high quality and acceptance among peers. A step-wise and open process was initiated for MIATA. A dedicated independent website was launched and public consultation periods, workshops, and webinars are being conducted to achieve technical precision, user-friendliness, adequate incorporation of concerns, high acceptance rates among peers, an ultimately maximum value for the scientific community