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Standardization of Laboratory Methods for the PERCH Study
Author(s) -
Amanda J. Driscoll,
Ruth A. Karron,
Susan C. Morpeth,
Niranjan Bhat,
Orin S. Levine,
Henry C. Baggett,
W. Abdullah Brooks,
Daniel R. Feikin,
Laura L. Hammitt,
Stephen R. C. Howie,
Maria Deloria Knoll,
Karen L. Kotloff,
Shabir A. Madhi,
J. Anthony G. Scott,
Donald M. Thea,
Peter V. Adrian,
Dilruba Ahmed,
Muntasir Alam,
Trevor P. Anderson,
Martín Antonio,
Vicky L. Baillie,
Michel Dione,
Hubert P. Endtz,
Caroline W. Gitahi,
Angela Karani,
Geoffrey Kwenda,
Abdoul Aziz Maiga,
Jessica McClellan,
Joanne Mitchell,
Palesa Morailane,
Daisy Mugo,
John Mwaba,
James Mwansa,
Salim Mwarumba,
Sammy Nyongesa,
Sandra Panchalingam,
Mohammad Mustafizur Rahman,
Pongpun Sawatwong,
Boubou Tamboura,
Aliou Touré,
Toni Whistler,
Katherine L. O’Brien,
David R. Murdoch
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
clinical infectious diseases
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.44
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1537-6591
pISSN - 1058-4838
DOI - 10.1093/cid/cix081
Subject(s) - medicine , standardization , pneumonia , quality assurance , etiology , intensive care medicine , standard operating procedure , pathology , external quality assessment , operations management , political science , law , economics
The Pneumonia Etiology Research for Child Health study was conducted across 7 diverse research sites and relied on standardized clinical and laboratory methods for the accurate and meaningful interpretation of pneumonia etiology data. Blood, respiratory specimens, and urine were collected from children aged 1-59 months hospitalized with severe or very severe pneumonia and community controls of the same age without severe pneumonia and were tested with an extensive array of laboratory diagnostic tests. A standardized testing algorithm and standard operating procedures were applied across all study sites. Site laboratories received uniform training, equipment, and reagents for core testing methods. Standardization was further assured by routine teleconferences, in-person meetings, site monitoring visits, and internal and external quality assurance testing. Targeted confirmatory testing and testing by specialized assays were done at a central reference laboratory.

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