External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity

This review shows the current analytical quality for the following analytes used as tumour markers in the external quality assessment (EQA)-programmes of Instand e.V., a national EQA-organiser in Germany: Corticotropin (ACTH), growth hormone (GH, hGH), prolactin (PRL), chorionic gonadotropin (CG, hC...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wood, William Graham, Reinauer, Hans
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: German Medical Science GMS Publishing House 2005-05-01
Series:GMS German Medical Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.egms.de/en/gms/2005-3/000020.shtml
id doaj-985cedabcf424e56a073b41af97183cc
record_format Article
spelling doaj-985cedabcf424e56a073b41af97183cc2020-11-25T02:11:22ZdeuGerman Medical Science GMS Publishing HouseGMS German Medical Science1612-31742005-05-013Doc02External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificityWood, William GrahamReinauer, HansThis review shows the current analytical quality for the following analytes used as tumour markers in the external quality assessment (EQA)-programmes of Instand e.V., a national EQA-organiser in Germany: Corticotropin (ACTH), growth hormone (GH, hGH), prolactin (PRL), chorionic gonadotropin (CG, hCG), calcitonin (CT, hCT), thyroglobulin (Tg), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), CA-Antigens 125, 72-4, 15-3 and 19-9, alpha foetoprotein (AFP) and prostate-specific antigen (PSA). The results from the participants show a large variation in the precision of the methods used as well as in the comparability of results between methods for the same analyte. In general, the hormones used as tumour markers show better performance than the "CA-markers", which are often inadequately standardised and defined. In the case of one CA-marker (CA 72-4/TAG 72-4), the differences between the lowest kit median concentration and highest kit median concentration for one sample pair were 440% and 580%. The corresponding figures for ACTH were 123% and 156% and for CEA 180% and 184%. The classical tumour markers such as carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and alpha foetoprotein (AFP) performed markedly better than the CA-markers and PSA with regards to both inter- and intra-method comparability. The inter-laboratory precision for a given kit and marker was acceptable in many cases. The results show that only results from the same kit/method for each tumour marker can be used for cumulative or time-dependent comparison of results - for example pre-operative and post-operative follow up. In the case of prostate specific antigen (PSA), the kits used for free and total PSA must come from the same producer, if the generally accepted ratios are to have any diagnostic value. The need for kit- and laboratory-specific reference ranges and cut-off values for setting diagnostic specificity and sensitivity is highlighted from the EQA-results. The situation for inter-method comparability for the CA-Markers has not improved over the past decade. With the exception of calcitonin for detecting medullary thyroid carcinoma, chorionic gonadotropin in germ-cell tumours in men and thyroglobulin after total thyroidectomy, none of the remaining analytes appear to be suitable for screening purposes.http://www.egms.de/en/gms/2005-3/000020.shtmlexternal quality assessment (EQA)tumour markersprecisionaccuracystandardisationmethod comparisondiagnostic specificitydiagnostic sensitivityimmunoassay
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Wood, William Graham
Reinauer, Hans
spellingShingle Wood, William Graham
Reinauer, Hans
External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
GMS German Medical Science
external quality assessment (EQA)
tumour markers
precision
accuracy
standardisation
method comparison
diagnostic specificity
diagnostic sensitivity
immunoassay
author_facet Wood, William Graham
Reinauer, Hans
author_sort Wood, William Graham
title External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
title_short External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
title_full External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
title_fullStr External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
title_full_unstemmed External quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
title_sort external quality assessment of tumour marker analysis: state of the art and consequences for estimating diagnostic sensitivity and specificity
publisher German Medical Science GMS Publishing House
series GMS German Medical Science
issn 1612-3174
publishDate 2005-05-01
description This review shows the current analytical quality for the following analytes used as tumour markers in the external quality assessment (EQA)-programmes of Instand e.V., a national EQA-organiser in Germany: Corticotropin (ACTH), growth hormone (GH, hGH), prolactin (PRL), chorionic gonadotropin (CG, hCG), calcitonin (CT, hCT), thyroglobulin (Tg), carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), CA-Antigens 125, 72-4, 15-3 and 19-9, alpha foetoprotein (AFP) and prostate-specific antigen (PSA). The results from the participants show a large variation in the precision of the methods used as well as in the comparability of results between methods for the same analyte. In general, the hormones used as tumour markers show better performance than the "CA-markers", which are often inadequately standardised and defined. In the case of one CA-marker (CA 72-4/TAG 72-4), the differences between the lowest kit median concentration and highest kit median concentration for one sample pair were 440% and 580%. The corresponding figures for ACTH were 123% and 156% and for CEA 180% and 184%. The classical tumour markers such as carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and alpha foetoprotein (AFP) performed markedly better than the CA-markers and PSA with regards to both inter- and intra-method comparability. The inter-laboratory precision for a given kit and marker was acceptable in many cases. The results show that only results from the same kit/method for each tumour marker can be used for cumulative or time-dependent comparison of results - for example pre-operative and post-operative follow up. In the case of prostate specific antigen (PSA), the kits used for free and total PSA must come from the same producer, if the generally accepted ratios are to have any diagnostic value. The need for kit- and laboratory-specific reference ranges and cut-off values for setting diagnostic specificity and sensitivity is highlighted from the EQA-results. The situation for inter-method comparability for the CA-Markers has not improved over the past decade. With the exception of calcitonin for detecting medullary thyroid carcinoma, chorionic gonadotropin in germ-cell tumours in men and thyroglobulin after total thyroidectomy, none of the remaining analytes appear to be suitable for screening purposes.
topic external quality assessment (EQA)
tumour markers
precision
accuracy
standardisation
method comparison
diagnostic specificity
diagnostic sensitivity
immunoassay
url http://www.egms.de/en/gms/2005-3/000020.shtml
work_keys_str_mv AT woodwilliamgraham externalqualityassessmentoftumourmarkeranalysisstateoftheartandconsequencesforestimatingdiagnosticsensitivityandspecificity
AT reinauerhans externalqualityassessmentoftumourmarkeranalysisstateoftheartandconsequencesforestimatingdiagnosticsensitivityandspecificity
_version_ 1724914653363961856