Field-testing and validation in a primary care setting of a point-of-care test for C-reactive protein

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Abstract

Background: Use of point-of-care testing (POCT) in primary care has increased. There is a need for high-quality field evaluation of POCT before deployment can be considered. Method: A POCT system for C-reactive protein was evaluated in a routine general practice setting. The standard laboratory method was a dry slide method based in a routine hospital laboratory. Results: Scatterplots for both venous and capillary blood POCT system results versus the standard laboratory assay produced correlation coefficients of greater than 0.96. Bland-Altman plots indicated that 95% of venous and capillary POCT results fell within ±10 mg/L of the mean value with no clinically significant difference from laboratory results. Conclusions: The POCT system performed reliably in a routine general practice setting with satisfactory performance against an accepted laboratory method.

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Seamark, D. A., Backhouse, S. N., & Powell, R. (2003). Field-testing and validation in a primary care setting of a point-of-care test for C-reactive protein. Annals of Clinical Biochemistry, 40(2), 178–180. https://doi.org/10.1258/000456303763046139

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