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Clinical pharmacology quality assurance program: Models for longitudinal analysis of antiretroviral proficiency testing for international laboratories

  • Robin Difrancesco
  • , Susan L. Rosenkranz
  • , Charlene R. Taylor
  • , Poonam G. Pande
  • , Suzanne M. Siminski
  • , Richard W. Jenny
  • , Gene D. Morse
  • SUNY Buffalo
  • Frontier Science & Technology Research Foundation
  • RTI International
  • New York State Department of Health

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

29 Scopus citations

Abstract

ABSTRACT:: Among National Institutes of Health HIV Research Networks conducting multicenter trials, samples from protocols that span several years are analyzed at multiple clinical pharmacology laboratories (CPLs) for multiple antiretrovirals. Drug assay data are, in turn, entered into study-specific data sets that are used for pharmacokinetic analyses, merged to conduct cross-protocol pharmacokinetic analysis, and integrated with pharmacogenomics research to investigate pharmacokinetic-pharmacogenetic associations. The CPLs participate in a semiannual proficiency testing (PT) program implemented by the Clinical Pharmacology Quality Assurance program. Using results from multiple PT rounds, longitudinal analyses of recovery are reflective of accuracy and precision within/across laboratories. The objectives of this longitudinal analysis of PT across multiple CPLs were to develop and test statistical models that longitudinally: (1) assess the precision and accuracy of concentrations reported by individual CPLs and (2) determine factors associated with round-specific and long-term assay accuracy, precision, and bias using a new regression model. A measure of absolute recovery is explored as a simultaneous measure of accuracy and precision. Overall, the analysis outcomes assured 97% accuracy (±20% of the final target concentration of all (21) drug concentration results reported for clinical trial samples by multiple CPLs). Using the Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act acceptance of meeting criteria for ≥2/3 consecutive rounds, all 10 laboratories that participated in 3 or more rounds per analyte maintained Clinical Laboratory Improvement Act proficiency. Significant associations were present between magnitude of error and CPL (Kruskal-Wallis P < 0.001) and antiretroviral (Kruskal-Wallis P < 0.001).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)631-642
Number of pages12
JournalTherapeutic Drug Monitoring
Volume35
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2013

Keywords

  • antiretroviral proficiency testing
  • interlaboratory performance
  • longitudinal analysis model

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