Audit of sweat chloride testing reveals analytical errors

Author:

Prenzel Freerk1ORCID,Ceglarek Uta2,Adams Ines3,Hammermann Jutta4,Issa Ulrike5,Lohse Gerhild6,Mainz Jochen G.7,Meister Jochen8,Spittel Dana9,Thoss Karin10,Vogel Mandy111,Duckstein Franziska7,Henn Constance1,Hentschel Julia12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics , University of Leipzig Medical Center , Leipzig , Germany

2. Institute of Laboratory Medicine, Clinical Chemistry and Molecular Diagnostics , University of Leipzig Medical Center , Leipzig , Germany

3. Department of Pediatrics , University of Magdeburg , Magdeburg , Germany

4. Children’s Hospital, Technical University Dresden , Dresden , Germany

5. Department of Pediatrics , University of Halle , Halle/Saale , Germany

6. Department of Pediatrics , Heinrich-Braun-Hospital Zwickau , Zwickau , Germany

7. Cystic Fibrosis Center for Children and Adults, Brandenburg Medical School (MHB) University , Brandenburg , Germany

8. Department of Pediatrics, Helios Clinic , Aue , Germany

9. Department of Pediatrics, Helios Clinic , Erfurt , Germany

10. Department of Pediatrics , Regional Hospital Greiz , Greiz , Germany

11. LIFE Leipzig Research Center for Civilization Diseases , University of Leipzig , Leipzig , Germany

12. Institute of Human Genetics , University of Leipzig Medical Center , Leipzig , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Objectives Sweat chloride testing (SCT) is the mainstay for the diagnosis of cystic fibrosis (CF) and biomarker in the evaluation of CFTR-modifying drugs. To be a reliable and valid tool, analytical variance (CVA) must be minimized. However, external quality assessments have revealed significant deviations in routine clinical practice. Our goal was to identify and quantify technical errors through proficiency testing and simulations. Methods Chloride concentrations of three blinded samples (each as triplicates) were measured in 9 CF centers using a chloridometer in a routine setting. Technical errors were simulated and quantified in a series of measurements. We compared imprecision and bias before and after a counseling session by evaluating coefficients of variation (CV), adherence to tolerance limits, and inter-rater variability coefficients. Results Pipetting errors resulting in changes in sample volume were identified as the main source of error with deviations up to 41%. After the counseling session, the overall CVA decreased from 7.6 to 5.2%, the pass rate increased from 67 to 92%, and the inter-rater variability diminished. Significant deviations continued to be observed in individual centers. Conclusions Prevention of technical errors in SCT decreases imprecision and bias. Quality assurance programs must be established in all CF centers, including staff training, standard operating procedures, and proficiency testing.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry,General Medicine

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