Abstract

IntroductionA product recall was issued for the Roche/Hitachi Cobas Gentamicin II assays on 25th May 2016 in Australia, after a 15 - 20% positive analytical shift was discovered. Laboratories were advised to employ the Thermo Fisher Gentamicin assay as an alternative. Following the reintroduction of the revised assay on 12th September 2016, a second reagent recall was made on 20th March 2017 after the discovery of a 20% negative analytical shift due to erroneous instrument adjustment factor.Materials and methodsThe practices of an index laboratory were examined to determine how the analytical shifts evaded detection by routine internal quality control (IQC) and external quality assurance (EQA) systems. The ability of the patient result-based approaches, including moving average (MovAvg) and moving sum of outliers (MovSO) approaches in detecting these shifts were examined.ResultsInternal quality control data of the index laboratory were acceptable prior to the product recall. The practice of adjusting IQC target following a change in assay method resulted in the missed negative shift when the revised Roche assay was reintroduced. While the EQA data of the Roche subgroup showed clear negative bias relative to other laboratory methods, the results were considered as possible ‘matrix effect’. The MovAvg method detected the positive shift before the product recall. The MovSO did not detect the negative shift in the index laboratory but did so in another laboratory 5 days before the second product recall.ConclusionsThere are gaps in current laboratory quality practices that leave room for analytical errors to evade detection.

Highlights

  • A product recall was issued for the Roche/Hitachi Cobas Gentamicin II assays on 25th May 2016 in Australia, after a 15 - 20% positive analytical shift was discovered

  • While the external quality assurance (EQA) data of the Roche subgroup showed clear negative bias relative to other laboratory methods, the results were considered as possible ‘matrix effect’

  • The moving sum of outliers (MovSO) did not detect the negative shift in the index laboratory but did so in another laboratory 5 days before the second product recall

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Summary

Introduction

A product recall was issued for the Roche/Hitachi Cobas Gentamicin II assays on 25th May 2016 in Australia, after a 15 - 20% positive analytical shift was discovered. The IQC system involves periodic measurement of a set of QC samples at different concentrations and comparing these results against predefined control limits. It is aimed at providing a snapshot of the assay performance at the time of measurement to assist in the decision to make available results produced by the assay. It is important to note that IQC and EQA are not generally designed to monitor trueness Despite these quality systems, clinically significant changes in analytical performance can occur and yet evade detection by the laboratory.

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