Biomarkers And The Clinical Labratory Flashcards

1
Q

What is a bio marker?

A

A characteristic that is measured and evaluated as an indicator of normal biological processes, pathogenic processes or pharmacology responses to a therapeutic intervention

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2
Q

What are some key needs of a diagnostic bio marker?

A

Detect disease early
Classify disease type

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3
Q

What do predictive markers tell you?

A

Identify responders
Identify those likely to have an adverse event

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4
Q

What are metabolism biomarker?

A

They help aid in defining drug doses

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5
Q

What are outcome bio markers?

A

Response to therapy
Indication of progression
Evidence of recurrence

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6
Q

How do biomarkers go from research to routine?

A

Research lab needs to contact clinical biochem labs or into the diagnostic industry. The diagnostic industry chats to the biochem lab to make sure it’s feasible

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7
Q

Do the numbers of biomarkers decrease on the pathway from research lab to specialist lab to routine lab?

A

Yes.

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8
Q

Do the quality of assay decrease on the pathway from research lab to specialist lab to routine lab?

A

No

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9
Q

What are the research labs responsibility?

A

Investigate preanalytic requirements as soon as possible this includes the specimen, timing (e.g. Does it needs to be done in the morning) or the storage requirements

Undertake validation of assay performance - is it reproducible? Is there an okay detection limit, how accurately can you recover the added analyte, how robust is it?

You also need to look at clinical data on sufficient numbers of patients and controls

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10
Q

Where is most bio markers research undertaken?

A

Diagnostic industry

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11
Q

What are some key features of a research lab?

A

Reasonable resources - re staffing and times which means Experimental procedures consequently can be relatively complex.

Quality control is variable depending on lab - company/research institute. Standardisation unlikely

Patient cohorts may differ from those encountered in routine clinical practice

You want to make robust processes on relevant samples

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12
Q

What defines a specialist assay?

A

Small workload and/or rare clinical condition

They are in transition from research into routine practice

Techinically difficult or requiring specialist equipment

Clinical interpretation difficult/complex

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13
Q

What are specialist assays?

A

These are assays which are expensive to set up or aren’t needed often.

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14
Q

What are some early requirements for introducing a new routine test?

A

Well documented evidence that the test improves patient management

  • would this lead to fewer investigations, clinic visits and/or hospital bed days.
  • beneficial affect on patient pathway and patient outcome
  • Guideline recommendations desirable.
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15
Q

after getting evidence what do yo do to introduce a new routine test?

A

A business case/ plan for funding

Careful consideration of workload implications of making the test available
— actively educate users on how and when you should use the test

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16
Q

What are some consequences of introducing routine tests?

A

The CrP service was done by ELISA which took 2 weeks so they improved the service to in hospital 20 minutes.

This led to increase of workload as people started over asking for the test as it was easier to get.

17
Q

What are the pre-analytical requirements when introducing a new routine test

A

Ideally no special handling/storage required to transit - good stability

Absence of specific timing requirements

Awareness of possible effect on result of medication/ illness/ or intervention

18
Q

What happens in the sample reception?

A

Specimens are all bar coed during booking in - these contain details or patient and samples.

Samples come in the afternoon.

Samples kept for a week

19
Q

What are the analytic considerations when introducing a new routine test - what should new biomarkers show?

A
  • Good linearity on dilution, good within and between run reproducibility and excellent precision
  • be calibrated against an appropriate standard
  • be robust to clinically relevant interferences
20
Q

What are some analytical considerations of a new routine test?

A

Internal quality control and external quality assessment must be in place

Automation of tests with high workload essential in clinical biochem labs

21
Q

In a modern hospital lab what is the process?

A

Sample track sorts and sends bar coded specimens to the correct analysis

When complete results are uploaded to the lab computer for checking an authorisation by a biomedical scientist

22
Q

What does a reaction vessel do?

A

Reagents and spinned at a control temperature and mixes appropriate volumes

23
Q

What is a sample delivery?

A

Bar coding identifies tests and excellently pipettes precision, speed and convenience

24
Q

When can new biomarkers be taken from research into routine use?

A

Evidence supports clinical utility, funding is assured, only done to those likely to benefit, quality assured, automation for high workload tests