New statistical approach in biochemical method-comparison studies by using Westlake's procedure, and its application to continuous-flow, centrifugal analysis, and multilayer film analysis techniques.
- 1 June 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Clinical Chemistry
- Vol. 29 (6) , 1131-1136
- https://doi.org/10.1093/clinchem/29.6.1131
Abstract
In this paper, we present an application of Westlake's method (Biometrics 32:741, 1976) in method-comparison studies in clinical chemistry. The techniques under study are continuous flow (CF), centrifugal analysis (CA), and multilayer film analysis (the Kodak Ektachem procedure KE). The experimental data are for plasma calcium and serum uric acid. It results from a particular regression procedure proposed by York (Can J Phys 44:1079, 1966) that the usual regression comparison technique (joint testing procedure) is irrelevant because it rejects the identity hypothesis for the three methods, whereas fixing a tolerable upper limit deviation, delta, between two methods would lead to the conclusion that, in 95% of cases, CF and KE results are equivalent for plasma calcium (delta less than or equal to 45 mumol/L) and CF is roughly equivalent to the other two methods for serum uric acid (delta less than or equal to 27 mumol/L).This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Symmetrical Confidence Intervals for Bioequivalence TrialsBiometrics, 1976
- A new method for determining micro quantities of calcium in biological materialsAnalytical Biochemistry, 1967
- An improved automated procedure for the determination of calcium in biological specimensAnalytical Biochemistry, 1967