Lot-to-Lot Reagent Verification: A Critical but Under-Resourced Quality Challenge
This review addresses lot-to-lot verification as an essential but challenging component of long-term measurement procedure stability in clinical laboratories. The authors discuss experimental design, statistical approaches, and the growing role of patient-based monitoring and collaborative verification efforts. They call for a tripartite collaboration between regulators, manufacturers, and laboratory professionals to improve transparency around release criteria and ensure patient safety.
The original study
Lot-to-lot variation and verification.
- Authors
- Loh TP, Markus C, Tan CH, Tran MTC, Sethi SK, Lim CY
- Journal
- Clinical chemistry and laboratory medicine
- Type
- Journal Article, Review
- PMID
- 36420533
Original abstract
Lot-to-lot verification is an integral component for monitoring the long-term stability of a measurement procedure. The practice is challenged by the resource requirements as well as uncertainty surrounding experimental design and statistical analysis that is optimal for individual laboratories, although guidance is becoming increasingly available. Collaborative verification efforts as well as application of patient-based monitoring are likely to further improve identification of any differences in performance in a relatively timely manner. Appropriate follow up actions of failed lot-to-lot verification is required and must balance potential disruptions to clinical services provided by the laboratory. Manufacturers need to increase transparency surrounding release criteria and work closer with laboratory professionals to ensure acceptable reagent lots are released to end users. A tripartite collaboration between regulatory bodies, manufacturers, and laboratory medicine professional bodies is key to developing a balanced system where regulatory, manufacturing, and clinical requirements of laboratory testing are met, to minimize differences between reagent lots and ensure patient safety. Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine has served as a fertile platform for advancing the discussion and practice of lot-to-lot verification in the past 60 years and will continue to be an advocate of this important topic for many more years to come.