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  • Title: Evaluating lyophilized human serum preparations for suitability as proficiency testing materials for high-density lipoprotein cholesterol measurement.
    Author: Myers GL, Ross JW, Smith SJ, Morris CH, Triplett RB, Groff M.
    Journal: Arch Pathol Lab Med; 1995 Aug; 119(8):686-94. PubMed ID: 7646324.
    Abstract:
    OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the suitability of various commercial preparations for use by the College of American Pathologists as survey materials in assessing high-density lipoprotein cholesterol measurement performance. DESIGN: Lyophilized human serum preparations from six vendors (vendors A through F) were evaluated to determine which material(s) best mimicked the commutability of fresh human serum. Two freshly collected unfrozen pools prepared from donor specimens were analyzed concurrently with the vendor materials to identify sources of variation and possible matrix bias. Each material was evaluated using 5 common precipitation reagents (phosphotungstate-magnesium, phosphotungstic acid, dextran sulfate [50K and 500K], and heparin-manganese). To evaluate how each reagent separates lipoproteins in each material, the lipoprotein separation patterns were profiled using high-pressure liquid chromatography and compared with separation patterns observed for the fresh human serum pools. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Similarities in performance characteristics of vendor material(s) were compared with fresh human serum. RESULTS: Two of the six materials gave separation profiles for the lipoproteins similar to the typical patterns observed for human serum. Material from vendor B showed the best commutability across all of the precipitation reagents and had the best combination of low overall variability (10% for level 1 and 9.4% for level 2) and minimal concentration differences among reagents. CONCLUSIONS: Vendor B was selected by the College of American Pathologists to provide materials for use in assessing performance of lipid and lipoprotein testing in the 1994 Comprehensive Chemistry Surveys. This study demonstrates the great variability that different vendor preparations introduce into the measurement of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. It also emphasizes the effort required to evaluate the suitability of processed materials for use in proficiency testing.
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