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Repeat patient Testing-Quality control: An example of implementation in a network of commercial laboratories.

Kathleen P FreemanSusan DalyBente Flatland
Published in: Veterinary clinical pathology (2023)
The theory and calculations underpinning Repeat Patient Testing-Quality Control (RPT-QC) have been presented in prior publications. This paper gives an example of the process used for implementing RPT-QC in a network of veterinary commercial reference laboratories and the stages associated with the transition to the sole use of RPT-QC. To employ RPT-QC in this commercial laboratory network, eight stages of implementation were identified: (1) education, (2) data collection, (3) calculations, (4) QC recording and documentation, (5) running RPT-QC in parallel with a commercially available quality control material (QCM), (6) development of a Standard Operating Procedure (SOP), (7) development of complementary aspects supporting RPT-QC, and (8) sole use of RPT-QC. Advantages of RPT-QC included cost savings for QCM and External Quality Assessment (EQA) participation and the ability to use commutable specimens with a veterinary matrix at a result level that is of clinical significance for the species. A disadvantage of RPT-QC using a single level of control was the inability to demonstrate stable performance over a range of results. Future avenues for investigation include ongoing refinement of control limits using a pooled standard deviation of the duplicates (SDdup), S dup over time, investigation of blood samples from species other than the dog, and manipulation of specimens to produce "low abnormal" or "high abnormal" RPT-QC specimens.
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