Title: What is the Cardiovascular Biomarker Standardization Program?
1- What is the Cardiovascular Biomarker
Standardization Program?
Walter Snip Young, PhD Consultant,
NACDD Hubert Vesper, PhD Chief, CDC Clinical
Chemistry Branch
2What is standardization?
- When we buy fruit at a market we expect the
scales to be accurate. - When we pump gas we expect to get the amount of
gas the display shows us. - Scales and gas pumps are checked for accuracy and
certified with a sticker. - It seems reasonable that we assume that accuracy
of blood measurements is checked the same way. - This is NOT the case.
3Problem
- Variability in clinical test results exists
- - across laboratories
- - across lab equipment manufacturers
- - by varied lab procedures and
- - over time.
- Variability contributes to preventable morbidity
mortality from chronic diseases
4Quick Poll
- Have you ever asked your provider about the
accuracy and reliability of your cholesterol
tests?
5Solution
- CDC Clinical Chemistry Lab assigns reference
values to serum samples, the same way reference
balances are used to create a certified weight. - The Cardiovascular Standardization Program sends
these serum samples to laboratories and equipment
manufacturers for certification.
6Why is NACDD involved?
- Rationale Activity Domains
- Domain Health system interventions to improve
the effective delivery and use of clinical and
other preventive services - Domain Strategies to improve community-clinical
linkages ensuring that communities support and
clinics refer patients to programs services for
management of chronic conditions
7Deaths Prevented or Postponed and Life-Years
Gained Attributable to the LSP and CRMLN, 2000
Attributable to LSP and CRMLN Deaths Prevented or Postponed Life-Years Gained
0.5 558 6,756
1 1,116 13,512
5 5,579 67,561
8FY08 Monitary Benefits of the Lipid
Standardization Program
Percentage Attributable to the LSP and CRMLN Life-Years (LYs) Gained Benefits ( millions) Benefits ( millions) Benefits ( millions)
Percentage Attributable to the LSP and CRMLN Life-Years (LYs) Gained 50,000 /LY 113,000/LY 300,000/LY
0.5 6,756 338 763 2,027
1 13,512 676 1,527 4,054
5 67,561 3,378 7,634 20,268
9Importance of Accuracy in Blood Lipid Testing
- Public health surveillance and evaluation
- - Tracking population trends
- - Program evaluation (cholesterol screening /
education) - Research testing
- - Early cholesterol research was limited due to
high variability in lipid testing accuracy. - - Standardization allows results from disparate
studies to be compared across labs, procedures
and over different time periods. - Clinical testing
- - Increased accuracy reduces misclassification,
missed diagnoses - - Without standardization More false
positives, false negatives, needless treatment
costs , preventable human costs of no
treatment.
10What cardiovascular tests are currently
standardized?
- Only lipid testing. (Lipid Std. Program)
- Cardiovascular laboratory tests such as
troponin I-used as a test of several different
heart disorders, including heart attack. - B-naturetic peptide - used to treat
decompensated heart failure - C-reactive protein - used mainly as a marker of
inflammation determining disease progress or
treatment effectiveness - are NOT standardized.
11Quick Poll
- Do you think the results of your lab tests for
cholesterol might be dependent on the lab your
provider uses?
12Clinical Chemistry Branch Div. of Lab. Sciences,
Center for Environmental Health
- Goal Improve the diagnosis, treatment and
prevention of cardiovascular diseases through
standardized laboratory testing. - Service Objectives
- Support national international clinical
laboratory communities that want the highest
reliability of their tests. - Provide assistance and advice on lipid testing,
- Help assure the quality of lipid testing in
studies.
13(No Transcript)
14NACDD Partnership Roles with Division of
Laboratory Sciences
- Chair manage the Cardiovascular Biomarker
Standardization Steering Committee (CBSSC) - Educate public, public health community
policymakers re - A) relationship of standardization to clinical
outcomes - B) nutrition status in the U.S. population.
- 3. Advocate for standardization of chronic
disease tests. - 4. Produce data to support educational activities
- (e.g., A cost-benefit analysis of lipid
standardization in U.S.) - Hoerger TJ, Wittenborn JS, Young W. A
cost-benefit analysis of lipid standardization in
the United States. Prev Chronic Dis
20118(6)XX. http//www.cdc.gov/pcd/issues/2011/n
ov/10_0253.htm.. -
15NACCD brochure about clinical laboratory
standardization
- Goal
- Provide basic information about
- Standardization,
- Standardization process,
- Benefits of Standardization
- Target Audience
- Public health officials
- Physicians
- Patient care and advocacy groups
- Those who benefit from standardization
- The brochure uses examples from the CDC Lipid
Standardization Program
16Roles / Activities of CBSSC?
- Provides expert opinion on
- - Expansion of CVD test standardization, beyond
the Lipid Standardization Program - - Reviews new CDC technologies research
- - Addition of mass spectrometry methods
- - Progress on new method for measuring small
particle LDL - - Suggests funding sources advocates for
- expansion of CV standardization program
-
-
17Cardiovascular Biomarker Standardization Steering
Committee (CBSSC) Members
- Neil Greenberg, PhD, Former Director, Regulatory
Affairs, Clinical Lab Products,lOrtho Clinical
Diagnostics - Elena Kuklina, MD, PhD, Sr. Service Fellow, Div
of Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention, CDC - Elizabeth Teng Leary, PhD, Chief Scientific
Officer, Pacific Biometrics. - Nader Rifai, PhD, Director, Clinical Chemistry,
Laboratory Medicine, Boston Childrens Hospital - Russell Tracy, PhD, Sr. Assoc. Dean for Research
and Academic Affairs, University of Vermont,
College of Medicine, - Donald A. Wiebe, PhD, Assoc Prof, School of
Medicine and Public Health Pathology and
Laboratory Medicine, U of Wisconsin - Peter W. F. Wilson, MD, Emory U., School of
Medicine, Department of Medicine, Cardiology
Division
18What are the steps to the Lipid Standardization
Process?.
- Step 1 Reference System - A reference system
consisting of reference methods and materials is
established. - Step 2 Calibration - Clinical tests are
calibrated using the single donor sera developed
in the first step. - Step 3 Patient Testing Assessment - Patient
testing is assessed to monitor accuracy and
precision.
19Benefits to Public health officials
- Public health officials can reliably evaluate
public health efforts by monitoring biomarkers in
populations over many years even when tests and
testing equipment change over time.
20Benefits to Physicians
- Physicians can diagnose treat patients more
effectively with accurate tests that allow the
use of evidence-based clinical guidelines.
21Benefits to Researchers
- Researchers can compile compare cardiovascular
testing data across laboratories and studies to
formulate evidence-based patient guidelines
public health policies.
22Benefits to Patients
- Patients can be assured of the accuracy of their
clinical tests, more confident in disease
prevention and treatment recommendations, and
perhaps motivated to be more compliant with
clinical recommendations.
23Conclusion Cardiovascular Biomarker
Standardization Program assures accuracy and
reliability of tests for
- Total cholesterol (TC)
- High-density lipoprotein
- cholesterol (HDL-C)
- Low-density lipoprotein
- cholesterol (LDL-C)
- Triglycerides (TG)
- Apolipoprotien B
- C-reactive protein
- LDL-subfractions
- in development
24Conclusion Standardized laboratory tests are
needed to
- Accurately diagnose patients provide better
patient care - Reliably monitor population health and assess
effectiveness of public health activities - Inform decision-making within clinical and
public health domains
25For Additional Information
- NACDD Walter Snip Young, PhD
- ? (303) 358-4681 ? www.chronicdisease.org ?
young_at_chronicdisease.org - CDC, Clin. Chem. Branch- Hubert Vesper, PhD
- ? (770) 488-4191
- ? hvesper_at_cdc.gov
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