Open Access
The Lancet Microbe, volume 4, issue 7, pages e552-e562
Design of external quality assessment schemes and definition of the roles of their providers in future epidemics
Christoph Buchta
1, 2
,
Heinz Zeichhardt
3, 4, 5
,
Stephan W. Aberle
6
,
Jeremy V. Camp
6
,
Irene G??rzer
6
,
Lukas Weseslindtner
6
,
Elisabeth Puchhammer-Stöckl
6
,
Wolfgang Huf
7
,
Bernhard Benka
8
,
Franz Allerberger
8
,
Martin Mielke
9
,
Andrea Griesmacher
1
,
Mathias M Müller
1
,
Ingo Schellenberg
4
,
M. Kammel
3, 4, 5
1
Austrian Association for Quality Assurance and Standardization of Medical and Diagnostic Tests, Vienna, Austria
|
2
European Organisation for External Quality Assurance Providers in Laboratory Medicine, Geneva, Switzerland
|
3
GBD Gesellschaft für Biotechnologische Diagnostik, Berlin, Germany
|
4
INSTAND eV Society for Promoting Quality Assurance in Medical Laboratories, Düsseldorf, Germany
|
5
IQVD GmbH, Institut für Qualitätssicherung in der Virusdiagnostik, Berlin, Germany
|
7
Karl Landsteiner Institute for Clinical Risk Management, Vienna, Austria
|
8
Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety, Vienna, Austria
|
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2023-07-01
Journal:
The Lancet Microbe
scimago Q1
SJR: 5.392
CiteScore: 27.2
Impact factor: 20.9
ISSN: 26665247
Microbiology (medical)
Microbiology
Infectious Diseases
Virology
Abstract
During an epidemic, individual test results form the basis of epidemiological indicators such as case numbers or incidence. Therefore, the accuracy of measures derived from these indicators depends on the reliability of individual results. In the COVID-19 pandemic, monitoring and evaluating the performance of the unprecedented number of testing facilities in operation, and novel testing systems in use, was urgently needed. External quality assessment (EQA) schemes are unique sources of data reporting on testing performance, and their providers are recognised contacts and support for test facilities (for technical–analytical topics) and health authorities (for planning the monitoring of infection diagnostics). To identify information provided by SARS-CoV-2 genome detection EQA schemes that is relevant for public health microbiology, we reviewed the current literature published in PubMed between January, 2020, and July, 2022. We derived recommendations for EQA providers and their schemes for best practices to monitor pathogen-detection performance in future epidemics. We also showed laboratories, test facilities, and health authorities the information and benefits they can derive from EQA data, and from the non-EQA services of their providers.
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