Recommendations for Setting a Criterion for Assessing Commutability of Secondary Calibrator Certified Reference Materials.
W Greg MillerThomas KellerJeffrey BuddJesper V JohansenMauro PanteghiniNeil GreenbergVincent DelatourFerruccio CeriottiLiesbet DeprezRobert RejJohanna E CamaraFinlay MacKenzieAlicia N LyleEline van der HagenChris BurnsPernille FauskangerSverre Sandbergnull nullPublished in: Clinical chemistry (2023)
A secondary higher-order calibrator is required to be commutable with clinical samples to be suitable for use in the calibration hierarchy of an end-user clinical laboratory in vitro diagnostic medical device (IVD-MD). Commutability is a property of a reference material that means results for a reference material and for clinical samples have the same numeric relationship, within specified limits, across the measurement procedures for which the reference material is intended to be used. Procedures for assessing commutability have been described in the literature. This report provides recommendations for establishing a quantitative criterion to assess the commutability of a certified reference material (CRM). The criterion is the maximum allowable noncommutability bias (MANCB) that allows a CRM to be used as a calibrator in a calibration hierarchy for an IVD-MD without exceeding the maximum allowable combined standard uncertainty for a clinical sample result (umaxCS). Consequently, the MANCB is derived as a fraction of the umaxCS for the measurand. The suitability of an MANCB for practical use in a commutability assessment is determined by estimating the number of measurements of clinical samples and CRMs required based on the precision performance and nonselectivity for the measurand of the measurement procedures in the assessment. Guidance is also provided for evaluating indeterminate commutability conclusions and how to report results of a commutability assessment.
Keyphrases