Clinical Chemistry, volume 70, issue 4, pages 669-679

Investigating the Current Harmonization Status of Tumor Markers Using Global External Quality Assessment Programs: A Feasibility Study

Huub H van Rossum 1
Stefan Holdenrieder 2, 3
Bart E.P.B. Ballieux 4
Tony C Badrick 5
Yeo-Min Yun 6
Chuanbao Zhang 7
Dina Patel 8
Marc Thelen 9, 10
Junghan Song 11
Nathalie Wojtalewicz 3
Nick Unsworth 12
Hubert W. Vesper 13
Wei Cui 14
Lakshmi V Ramanathan 15
Catharine Sturgeon 12
Qing Meng 16
Show full list: 16 authors
3
 
INSTAND e.V., Society for Promoting Quality Assurance in Medical Laboratories , Duesseldorf , Germany
5
 
RCPA Quality Assurance Programs , St Leonards, Sydney , Australia
8
 
UK NEQAS Immunology, Immunochemistry & Allergy, Northern General Hospital , Sheffield , United Kingdom
9
 
SKML , Nijmegen , The Netherlands
12
 
UK NEQAS [Edinburgh], Department of Laboratory Medicine, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh , Edinburgh , United Kingdom
13
 
Division of Laboratory Sciences, National Center for Environmental Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention , Atlanta, GA , United States
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-02-22
scimago Q1
SJR1.460
CiteScore11.3
Impact factor7.1
ISSN00099147, 15308561
Clinical Biochemistry
Biochemistry (medical)
Abstract
Background

The harmonization status of most tumor markers (TMs) is unknown. We report a feasibility study performed to determine whether external quality assessment (EQA) programs can be used to obtain insights into the current harmonization status of the tumor markers α-fetoprotein (AFP), prostate specific antigen (PSA), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), cancer antigen (CA)125, CA15-3 and CA19-9.

Methods

EQA sample results provided by 6 EQA providers (INSTAND [Germany], Korean Association of External Quality Assessment Service [KEQAS, South Korea], National Center for Clinical Laboratories [NCCL, China], United Kingdom National External Quality Assessment Service [UK NEQAS, United Kingdom], Stichting Kwaliteitsbewaking Medische Laboratoriumdiagnostiek [SKML, the Netherlands], and the Royal College of Pathologists of Australasia Quality Assurance Programs [RCPAQAP, Australia]) between 2020 and 2021 were used. The consensus means, calculated from the measurement procedures present in all EQA programs (Abbott Alinity, Beckman Coulter DxI, Roche Cobas, and Siemens Atellica), was used as reference values. Per measurement procedure, the relative difference between consensus mean for each EQA sample and the mean of all patient-pool–based EQA samples were calculated and compared to minimum, desirable, and optimal allowable bias criteria based on biological variation.

Results

Between 19040 (CA15-3) and 25398 (PSA) individual results and 56 (PSA) to 76 (AFP) unique EQA samples were included in the final analysis. The mean differences with the consensus mean of patient-pool–based EQA samples for all measurement procedures were within the optimum bias criterion for AFP, the desirable bias for PSA, and the minimum bias criterion for CEA. However, CEA results <8 µg/L exceeded the minimum bias criterion. For CA125, CA15-3, and CA19-9, the harmonization status was outside the minimum bias criterion, with systematic differences identified.

Conclusions

This study provides relevant information about the current harmonization status of 6 tumor markers. A pilot harmonization investigation for CEA, CA125, CA15-3, and CA19-9 would be desirable.

Found 
Found 

Top-30

Journals

1
2
1
2

Publishers

1
2
1
2
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated only for publications connected to researchers, organizations and labs registered on the platform.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex | MLA
Found error?