The quality of Oral Anticoagulant Therapy (OAT) management relies both on the adequacy (safety and effectiveness) of treatment and on the accuracy (precision and trueness) of PT-INR (Prothombin Time - International Normalized Ratio) determination. Since its introduction by Quick in 1935 [1], many efforts have been made to standardise the PT-INR method and to control the several preanalytical, analytical and post-analytical variables that may affect the assay results [2,3]. The introduction of automated techniques has greatly improved the throughput as well as the analytical performance of the assay. However, in some analysers, the robotic pipetting by means of a single sample probe, which comes into contact successively with different specimens, may lead to sample-to-sample carryover, which occurs when a portion of one specimen is transferred into the following one [4,5]. Sample carryover may impair the accuracy of the assay. Following the serendipitous observation of a sample carryover case while performing PT-INR determination, we decided to evaluate the impact of this phenomenon on plasmas from patients undergoing OAT control.

Sample carryover in PT-INR determination Is it an issue in Oral Anticoagulant Therapy control?

Caruso R;
2011

Abstract

The quality of Oral Anticoagulant Therapy (OAT) management relies both on the adequacy (safety and effectiveness) of treatment and on the accuracy (precision and trueness) of PT-INR (Prothombin Time - International Normalized Ratio) determination. Since its introduction by Quick in 1935 [1], many efforts have been made to standardise the PT-INR method and to control the several preanalytical, analytical and post-analytical variables that may affect the assay results [2,3]. The introduction of automated techniques has greatly improved the throughput as well as the analytical performance of the assay. However, in some analysers, the robotic pipetting by means of a single sample probe, which comes into contact successively with different specimens, may lead to sample-to-sample carryover, which occurs when a portion of one specimen is transferred into the following one [4,5]. Sample carryover may impair the accuracy of the assay. Following the serendipitous observation of a sample carryover case while performing PT-INR determination, we decided to evaluate the impact of this phenomenon on plasmas from patients undergoing OAT control.
2011
Istituto di Fisiologia Clinica - IFC
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
prod_203208-doc_45206.pdf

non disponibili

Descrizione: Sample carryover
Dimensione 196.6 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
196.6 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/8757
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact