1. Evaluating the quality of a cell counting measurement process via a dilution series experimental design
- Author
-
Anne L. Plant, Ravi Vyzasatya, Sumona Sarkar, Steven P. Lund, John T. Elliott, Padmavathy Vanguri, and Sheng Lin-Gibson
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Quality Control ,Cancer Research ,Accuracy and precision ,Computer science ,Immunology ,Cell Count ,computer.software_genre ,03 medical and health sciences ,Automation ,0302 clinical medicine ,Immunology and Allergy ,Humans ,Genetics (clinical) ,Transplantation ,Series (mathematics) ,Design of experiments ,Process (computing) ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Cell Biology ,Replicate ,Gold standard (test) ,Repeatability ,Cell counting ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Data mining ,computer - Abstract
Background aims Cell counting measurements are critical in the research, development and manufacturing of cell-based products, yet determining cell quantity with accuracy and precision remains a challenge. Validating and evaluating a cell counting measurement process can be difficult because of the lack of appropriate reference material. Here we describe an experimental design and statistical analysis approach to evaluate the quality of a cell counting measurement process in the absence of appropriate reference materials or reference methods. Methods The experimental design is based on a dilution series study with replicate samples and observations as well as measurement process controls. The statistical analysis evaluates the precision and proportionality of the cell counting measurement process and can be used to compare the quality of two or more counting methods. As an illustration of this approach, cell counting measurement processes (automated and manual methods) were compared for a human mesenchymal stromal cell (hMSC) preparation. Results For the hMSC preparation investigated, results indicated that the automated method performed better than the manual counting methods in terms of precision and proportionality. Discussion By conducting well controlled dilution series experimental designs coupled with appropriate statistical analysis, quantitative indicators of repeatability and proportionality can be calculated to provide an assessment of cell counting measurement quality. This approach does not rely on the use of a reference material or comparison to "gold standard" methods known to have limited assurance of accuracy and precision. The approach presented here may help the selection, optimization, and/or validation of a cell counting measurement process.
- Published
- 2017