Analytic bias among certified methods for the measurement of hemoglobin A1c: A cause for concern?

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Abstract

We studied the magnitude, significance, and origin of an analytic bias that emerged between our point-of-care (POC) and our central laboratory (CL) methods for the measurement of hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and evaluated the analytic accuracy of 7 commonly used HbA1c methods relative to the National Glycohemoglobin Standardization Program (NGSP) reference method. The POC and CL methods were compared by split-sample analysis of clinical specimens and time series analyses of the HbA1c results reported for a 33-month period. The relative accuracies of 7 HbA1c methods were evaluated using College of American Pathologists proficiency survey results. Long-term drifts in the CL- and POC-analyzed test results caused the median intermethod bias [(POC result) - (CL result) ] to increase from -0.4% to -0.9% HbA1c. Systematic biases, drifts in analytic performance over time, and intermethod variability were frequently observed among the 7 NGSP-certified HbA1c methods. Intermethod variability is a potential source of inaccuracy whenever HbA1c results are interpreted relative to universal, fixed, clinical decision thresholds. ©American Society for Clinical Pathology.

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APA

Holmes, E. W., Erşahin, Ç., Augustine, G. J., Charnogursky, G. A., Gryzbac, M., Murrell, J. V., … Kahn, S. E. (2008). Analytic bias among certified methods for the measurement of hemoglobin A1c: A cause for concern? American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 129(4), 540–547. https://doi.org/10.1309/U3GPPTCBP1VLL8AW

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