A model for the harmonisation of test results of different quantitative D-dimer methods.
Publication year
2006Source
Thrombosis and Haemostasis, 95, 3, (2006), pp. 567-72ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Anesthesiology
CHL
Journal title
Thrombosis and Haemostasis
Volume
vol. 95
Issue
iss. 3
Page start
p. 567
Page end
p. 72
Subject
DCN 1: Perception and Action; UMCN 2.2: Vascular medicine and diabetesAbstract
The numerical test results of different D-dimer assays vary widely. Because of the complexity of the analyte of target as well as the variability in specificity of different D-dimer assays, only harmonisation of the test results seems to be feasible. The use of a single conversion factor does not take into account for several methods the lack of commutability between test results and consensus values at different D-dimer levels. This is probably related to the mutually different response of methods to high and low levels. We therefore designed a harmonisation model based on the transformation of a method-specific regression line to a reference regression line. We used the data for the measurement of a set of plasma samples with different D-dimer levels by 353 different laboratories using 7 of the most frequently used quantitative D-dimer methods. For each method we calculated the method-specific consensus value for each sample. The overall median value was also estimated. Per method linear regression was applied throughout the method-specific consensus values using the amount of patient pooled plasma added to the different plasma samples as the independent variable. The line through the overall median values of all 7 methods was used as the reference line. Harmonisation between the methods was obtained by transformation of the method-specific regression line to the reference line. This harmonisation resulted in a reduction of the variability between the method-specific consensus values from about 75% to about 5.5%. Clinical validation of this concept had shown significant improvement of the test result comparability. We conclude that this model is a feasible approach in the harmonisation of D-dimer methods. If the harmonisation procedure is included in the calibration procedure by the manufacturers, customers will automatically obtain harmonised test results.
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- Academic publications [246627]
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- Faculty of Medical Sciences [93367]
- Open Access publications [107722]
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