Publication | Open Access
Reduction of intra‐ and interlaboratory variation in CD34<sup>+</sup> stem cell enumeration using stable test material, standard protocols and targeted training
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References
2000
Year
Cell TherapyImmunophenotypingBiomedical EngineeringStem Cell BiologyInterlaboratory VariationTranslational MedicineLaboratory HematologyStandard ProtocolsHematologyClinical TrialsClinical Cell AnalysisStem Cell TransplantationBiostatisticsLaboratory MedicineCell TransplantationMolecular DiagnosticsStem CellsHealth SciencesBiomedical AnalysisCytometryStem Cell TherapiesEuropean Working GroupCell EngineeringCell BiologyStable Test MaterialStem Cell ResearchStem-cell TherapyCd34+ Stem CellsMedicine
The European Working Group on Clinical Cell Analysis (EWGCCA) has, in preparation for a multicentre peripheral blood stem cell clinical trial, developed a single-platform flow cytometric protocol for the enumeration of CD34+ stem cells. Using this protocol, stabilized blood and targeted training, the EWGCCA have attempted to standardize CD34+ stem cell enumeration across 24 clinical sites. Results were directly compared with participants in the UK National External Quality Assessment Scheme (NEQAS) for CD34+ Stem Cell Quantification that analysed the same specimens using non-standardized methods. Two bead-counting systems, Flow-Count and TruCount, were also evaluated by the EWGCCA participants during trials 2 and 3. Using Flow-Count, the intralaboratory coefficient of variation (CV) was </= 5% in 39% of the laboratories (trial 1), increasing to 65% by trial 3. Interlaboratory variation was reduced from 23.3% (trial 1) to 10.8% in trial 3. In trial 2, 70% of laboratories achieved an intralaboratory CV </= 5% using TruCount, increasing to 74% for trial 3; the interlaboratory CV was reduced from 23.4% to 9.5%. Comparative analysis of the EWGCCA and the UK NEQAS cohorts revealed that EWGCCA laboratories, using the standardized approach, had lower interlaboratory variation. Thus, the use of a common standardized protocol and targeted training significantly reduced intra- and interlaboratory CD34+ cell count variation.
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