Petra A T Araújo1, Dylan Thomas1, Tara Sadeghieh1, Victoria Bevilacqua1, Man Khun Chan1, Yunqi Chen1, Edward Randell2, Khosrow Adeli3. 1. CALIPER Program, Paediatric Laboratory Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada. 2. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Eastern Health, St. John's, NL, Canada. 3. CALIPER Program, Paediatric Laboratory Medicine, The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, ON, Canada. Electronic address: khosrow.adeli@sickkids.ca.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The CALIPER program has established a comprehensive database of age- and sex-stratified pediatric reference intervals for over 85 common biochemical markers, largely using the Abbott ARCHITECT assays. To allow a broader application of the CALIPER database, we examined transference to 36 Beckman Coulter Synchron Unicel DxC800 assays, based on the CLSI C28-A3/EP9-A3 guidelines. METHODS: Patient sample comparisons were performed for 36 biochemical assays using 200 serum specimens obtained from pediatric patients on the Abbott ARCHITECT ci8200 and the Beckman Coulter DxC800. For each analyte, R(2) values were calculated to assess the quality of correlation between the platforms. Statistical criteria used to assess transferability included a) regression analysis to create the equation of the line of best fit, b) standardized residual, c) Bland-Altman, and d) quantile-quantile plots. Transferred reference intervals were further verified by analyzing serum samples from 100 healthy children from the CALIPER cohort on the Beckman Coulter system. RESULTS: The reference intervals for most of the assessed analytes were transferable to Beckman Coulter assays (31 out of 36 studied) and the newly calculated reference intervals were verified through analysis of CALIPER reference samples (28 out of 31). Eighteen assays demonstrated excellent correlation (R(2)≥0.95), and 13 assays showed strong correlation (0.77≤R2≤0.94). CONCLUSION: The current study allowed successful transference of a large number of biochemical markers from the CALIPER database to assays on the Beckman Coulter DxC800 platform. Transference should facilitate broader application of CALIPER reference intervals at pediatric centers using DxC biochemical assays.
BACKGROUND: The CALIPER program has established a comprehensive database of age- and sex-stratified pediatric reference intervals for over 85 common biochemical markers, largely using the Abbott ARCHITECT assays. To allow a broader application of the CALIPER database, we examined transference to 36 Beckman Coulter Synchron Unicel DxC800 assays, based on the CLSI C28-A3/EP9-A3 guidelines. METHODS:Patient sample comparisons were performed for 36 biochemical assays using 200 serum specimens obtained from pediatric patients on the Abbott ARCHITECT ci8200 and the Beckman Coulter DxC800. For each analyte, R(2) values were calculated to assess the quality of correlation between the platforms. Statistical criteria used to assess transferability included a) regression analysis to create the equation of the line of best fit, b) standardized residual, c) Bland-Altman, and d) quantile-quantile plots. Transferred reference intervals were further verified by analyzing serum samples from 100 healthy children from the CALIPER cohort on the Beckman Coulter system. RESULTS: The reference intervals for most of the assessed analytes were transferable to Beckman Coulter assays (31 out of 36 studied) and the newly calculated reference intervals were verified through analysis of CALIPER reference samples (28 out of 31). Eighteen assays demonstrated excellent correlation (R(2)≥0.95), and 13 assays showed strong correlation (0.77≤R2≤0.94). CONCLUSION: The current study allowed successful transference of a large number of biochemical markers from the CALIPER database to assays on the Beckman Coulter DxC800 platform. Transference should facilitate broader application of CALIPER reference intervals at pediatric centers using DxC biochemical assays.
Authors: Ji Yeon Sung; Jong Do Seo; Dae-Hyun Ko; Min-Jeong Park; Sang Mee Hwang; Sohee Oh; Sail Chun; Moon-Woo Seong; Junghan Song; Sang Hoon Song; Sung Sup Park Journal: Ann Lab Med Date: 2021-03-01 Impact factor: 3.464
Authors: Houman Tahmasebi; Victoria Higgins; Angela W S Fung; Dorothy Truong; Nicole M A White-Al Habeeb; Khosrow Adeli Journal: EJIFCC Date: 2017-03-08