Background: Inaccuracy in glucose POCT can lead to inappropriate therapeutic decisions. Here we evaluated the performance of three POCT glucometers by comparing results to those by an automated system traceable to higher-order references. Methods: 31 heparinized venous blood samples were collected and assayed in duplicate for whole blood glucose concentrations with Roche Accu-Check Compact Plus, Nova Biomedical NovaPro and OKBiotech OKmeterDirect glucometers. All systems were calibrated to report plasma-equivalent results. Samples were then centrifuged and plasma glucose was immediately determined by the hexokinase assay on Abbott Architect c16000 platform. The traceability of Abbott assay was checked by comparison with the hexokinase reference procedure performed on three samples. POCT performance was evaluated according to CLSI POCT12-A3 criteria [max 5% of results >±12 mg/dL (for reference results <100 mg/dL) or >±12.5% (for reference results ≥100 mg/dL)] and consensus error grid (CEG) analysis. Results: The Abbott assay was perfectly standardized (mean bias, 0.13%). Sample glucose concentrations were from 62 to 326 mg/dL, with haematocrit spanning from 0.27 to 0.58 L/L. Average CV on duplicates was 2.2% Roche, 3.3% Nova and 5.9% OKBiotech. All meters gave more than 5% of results (Roche 19.4%, Nova 16.1% and OKBiotech 22.6%) outside the CLSI criteria. However, all results, except two borderline values for OKBiotech, were within the low-risk zone according to CEG. Conclusions: By using CLSI acceptability criteria, the evaluated glucometers were not accurate enough for clinical use. CEG analysis suggests, however, that this inaccuracy would not have any significant impact on patient outcome. Sacks DB, Bruns DE, Horton J et al. Point-of-care blood glucose testing in acute and chronic care facilities; approved guideline – Third edition. The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute 2013, document POCT12-A

Verification of the accuracy of three glucose point-of-care testing (POCT) devices for their use in a hospital setting / E. Aloisio, E. Frusciante, A. Dolci, M. Panteghini. - In: BIOCHIMICA CLINICA. - ISSN 0393-0564. - 40 Special Supplement:4(2016), pp. P003.39-P003.39. ((Intervento presentato al 48. convegno Congresso Nazionale SIBioC tenutosi a Torino nel 2016.

Verification of the accuracy of three glucose point-of-care testing (POCT) devices for their use in a hospital setting

E. Aloisio
Primo
;
A. Dolci;M. Panteghini
Ultimo
2016

Abstract

Background: Inaccuracy in glucose POCT can lead to inappropriate therapeutic decisions. Here we evaluated the performance of three POCT glucometers by comparing results to those by an automated system traceable to higher-order references. Methods: 31 heparinized venous blood samples were collected and assayed in duplicate for whole blood glucose concentrations with Roche Accu-Check Compact Plus, Nova Biomedical NovaPro and OKBiotech OKmeterDirect glucometers. All systems were calibrated to report plasma-equivalent results. Samples were then centrifuged and plasma glucose was immediately determined by the hexokinase assay on Abbott Architect c16000 platform. The traceability of Abbott assay was checked by comparison with the hexokinase reference procedure performed on three samples. POCT performance was evaluated according to CLSI POCT12-A3 criteria [max 5% of results >±12 mg/dL (for reference results <100 mg/dL) or >±12.5% (for reference results ≥100 mg/dL)] and consensus error grid (CEG) analysis. Results: The Abbott assay was perfectly standardized (mean bias, 0.13%). Sample glucose concentrations were from 62 to 326 mg/dL, with haematocrit spanning from 0.27 to 0.58 L/L. Average CV on duplicates was 2.2% Roche, 3.3% Nova and 5.9% OKBiotech. All meters gave more than 5% of results (Roche 19.4%, Nova 16.1% and OKBiotech 22.6%) outside the CLSI criteria. However, all results, except two borderline values for OKBiotech, were within the low-risk zone according to CEG. Conclusions: By using CLSI acceptability criteria, the evaluated glucometers were not accurate enough for clinical use. CEG analysis suggests, however, that this inaccuracy would not have any significant impact on patient outcome. Sacks DB, Bruns DE, Horton J et al. Point-of-care blood glucose testing in acute and chronic care facilities; approved guideline – Third edition. The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute 2013, document POCT12-A
No
English
Settore BIO/12 - Biochimica Clinica e Biologia Molecolare Clinica
Poster
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Pubblicazione scientifica
2016
40 Special Supplement
4
P003
39
39
1
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza nazionale
Congresso Nazionale SIBioC
Torino
2016
48
Società Italiana di Biochimica Clinica e Biologia Molecolare Clinica (SIBioC)
Convegno nazionale
Centro per la riferibilità Metrologica in Medicina di Laboratorio (CIRME)
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Verification of the accuracy of three glucose point-of-care testing (POCT) devices for their use in a hospital setting / E. Aloisio, E. Frusciante, A. Dolci, M. Panteghini. - In: BIOCHIMICA CLINICA. - ISSN 0393-0564. - 40 Special Supplement:4(2016), pp. P003.39-P003.39. ((Intervento presentato al 48. convegno Congresso Nazionale SIBioC tenutosi a Torino nel 2016.
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
4
275
Article (author)
no
E. Aloisio, E. Frusciante, A. Dolci, M. Panteghini
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/466080
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