Validation of the New MINI-CUBE for Clinic Determination of Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate

Flaminia Tomassetti, Martina Pelagalli, Eleonora Nicolai, Serena Sarubbi, Cinzia Calabrese, Alfredo Giovannelli, Silvia Codella, Gemma Viola, Daniela Diamanti, Renato Massoud, Sergio Bernardini, Massimo Pieri

Abstract


Background: Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) indirectly measures blood fibrinogen, and it is altered by all those pathological conditions that modify the aggregation of red blood cells. The international guidelines by the International Council for Standardization in Hematology (ICSH) define the Westergren method as the gold standard for ESR, although it is completely operator-dependent, time-consuming, and requires a patients blood consumption. Therefore, the validation of new ESR analyzers is needed. The aim of this study is the validation of a new automated ESR analyzer, MINI-CUBE (DIESSE, Diagnostica Senese, Italy).

Methods: The samples (n = 270) were collected at the University Hospital of the University of Rome Tor Vergata. A comparison between the automated instrument and the gold standard was performed. Statistical analyses were processed by MedCalc software.

Results: The comparison analysis performed on the overall samples reported a good agreement, showing a Spearman rank correlation coefficient of 0.94 (P < 0.001), compared to the Westergren test. The Bland-Altman analysis showed a mean bias of 1.5 (maximum (max.):19.6; minimum (min.): -16.6). Inter-run (level 1 coefficient of variation (CV): 4.9%; level 2 CV: 0.8%), intra-run (level 1 CV: 21.1%; level 2 CV: 3.2%), and inter-instrument (level 1 CV: 27.1%; level 2 CV: 5.6%) precision were also assessed. The hematocrit value did not interfere with the analysis: Spearman rank correlation coefficient of 0.929 (P < 0.001); mean bias of 1.3 (max.:18.3; min.: -15.6).

Conclusions: Overall results from MINI-CUBE asserted a good correlation rate with the gold standard, and it could be considered an accurate, and objective alternative for the Westergren test.




J Hematol. 2023;12(5):208-214
doi: https://doi.org/10.14740/jh1165

Keywords


Erythrocyte sedimentation rate; Blood sedimentation; Method validation

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Journal of Hematology, bimonthly, ISSN 1927-1212 (print), 1927-1220 (online), published by Elmer Press Inc.                            
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