Abstrakt: |
The medical laboratory must provide results of measurements that are comparable over space and time in order to aid medical diagnosis and therapy. Thus, metrological traceability, preferably to the SI, is necessary. The task is formidable due to the many disciplines involved, the high production rate, short request-to-report time, small sample volumes, microheterogeneity of many analytes, and complex matrices. The prerequisite reference measurement systems include definition of measurand, unit of measurement (when applicable), consecutive levels of measurement procedures and calibrators in a calibration hierarchy, international organizations, reference measurement laboratories, dedicated manufacturers, written standards and guides for the medical laboratory, production of reference materials, internal and external quality control schemes, and increasingly accreditation. The present availability of reference measurement procedures and primary calibrators is shown to be insufficient to obtain international comparability of all types of quantity in laboratory medicine. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |