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A comprehensive quality control system suitable for academic research: application in a pediatric study

Authors :
Nina Makowski
Agnes M Ciplea
Mohsin Ali
Ilja Burdman
Anke Bartel
Bjoern B Burckhardt
Stephanie Läer
Jörg Breitkreutz
Ingrid Klingmann
Florian Lagler
Jan de Hoon
Michel Dalinghaus
Milica Bajcetic
Saskia de Wildt
Anne Keatley Clarke
Johannes Breur
Christoph Male
Laslo Ablonczy
Thomas Mir
Vladislav Vukomanovic
Milan Dukic
Ida Jovanovic
Bjoern Burckhardt
Willi Cawello
Karl Kleine
Angelika Moder
Emina Obarcanin
Peter Wagner
Jennifer Walsh
Anne van Hecken
Lucie Spatenkova
Ali Mohsin
Bojana Božić
Maja Bijelić
Agnes Ciplea
Muhammed Faisal
Samieh Farahani
Martin Feickert
Tanja Gangnus
Milica Lazic
Fabian Süssenbach
Marijke van der Meulen
Saša Popović
Miro Parezanović
Nori Smeets
Vanessa Swoboda
Dragana Bojanin
Stefan Đorđević
Jasminka Dragić
Ann-Kathrin Holle
Bosiljka Jovičić
Jovan Košutić
Gordana Kozomara
Haidara Majid
Jadranka Mitrović
Sanja Ninić
Miro Parezanovic
Vojislav Parezanovic
Andrija Pavlović
Sergej Prijić
Branislava Rebić
Igor Stefanović
Daniel Tordas
Irena Vulićević
Andjelka čeko
Marissa Herborts
Annelies Hennink
Bosiljka Kosanović
Sanja Kostic
Ljiljana Isailović
Jasmina Maksimovic
Badies Manai
Nada Martinović
Gyöngyi Máté
Miloš Perišić
Jelena Reljić
Regina Pirker
Marta Salamomovic
Claudia Schlesner
Jutta Tins
Eva Wissmann
Source :
Bioanalysis, 12, 5, pp. 319-333, Bioanalysis, 12, 319-333
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext Aim: Clinical research in pediatrics is progressively initiated by academia. As the reliability of pharmacodynamic measures is closely linked to the quality of bioanalytical data, bioanalytical quality assurance is crucial. However, clear guidance on comprehensive bioanalytical quality monitoring in the academic environment is lacking. Methods & results: By applying regulatory guidelines, international recommendations and scientific discussions, a five-step quality control system for monitoring the bioanalysis of aldosterone by immunoassay was developed. It comprised performance qualification, calibration curve evaluation, analysis of the intra- and inter-run performance via quality control samples, incurred sample reanalysis and external quality assessment by interlaboratory testing. A total of 55 out of 70 runs were qualified for the quantification of aldosterone in the study sample enabling the evaluation of 954 pediatric samples and demonstrating reliability over the 29-month bioanalysis period. Conclusion: The bioanalytical quality control system successfully monitored the aldosterone assay performance and proved its applicability in the academic environment.

Details

ISSN :
17576180
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Bioanalysis, 12, 5, pp. 319-333, Bioanalysis, 12, 319-333
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....efa41c6ede99bff4250575c889a10af3