Point-of-care testing (POCT) is becoming an increasingly popular way to perform laboratory tests closer to the patient. This option has several recognized advantages, such as accessibility, portability, speed, convenience, ease of use, ever-growing test panels, lower cumulative healthcare costs when used within appropriate clinical pathways, better patient empowerment and engagement, and reduction of certain pre-analytical errors, especially those related to specimen transportation. On the other hand, POCT also poses some limitations and risks, namely the risk of lower accuracy and reliability compared to traditional laboratory tests, quality control and connectivity issues, high dependence on operators (with varying levels of expertise or training), challenges related to patient data management, higher costs per individual test, regulatory and compliance issues such as the need for appropriate validation prior to clinical use (especially for rapid diagnostic tests; RDTs), as well as additional preanalytical sources of error that may remain undetected in this type of testing, which is usually based on whole blood samples (i.e., presence of interfering substances, clotting, hemolysis, etc.). There is no doubt that POCT is a breakthrough innovation in laboratory medicine, but the discussion on its appropriate use requires further debate and initiatives. This collective opinion paper, composed of abstracts of the lectures presented at the two-day expert meeting "Point-Of-Care-Testing: State of the Art and Perspective"(Venice, April 4-5, 2024), aims to provide a thoughtful overview of the state-of-the-art in POCT, its current applications, advantages and potential limitations, as well as some interesting reflections on the future perspectives of this particular field of laboratory medicine.

Point-of-care testing: state-of-the art and perspectives / Plebani, M.; Nichols, J. H.; Luppa, P. B.; Greene, D.; Sciacovelli, L.; Shaw, J.; Khan, A. I.; Carraro, P.; Freckmann, G.; Dimech, W.; Zaninotto, M.; Spannagl, M.; Huggett, J.; Kost, G. J.; Trenti, T.; Padoan, A.; Thomas, A.; Banfi, G.; Lippi, G.. - In: CLINICAL CHEMISTRY AND LABORATORY MEDICINE. - ISSN 1434-6621. - 63:1(2025), pp. 35-51. [10.1515/cclm-2024-0675]

Point-of-care testing: state-of-the art and perspectives

Banfi G.;
2025-01-01

Abstract

Point-of-care testing (POCT) is becoming an increasingly popular way to perform laboratory tests closer to the patient. This option has several recognized advantages, such as accessibility, portability, speed, convenience, ease of use, ever-growing test panels, lower cumulative healthcare costs when used within appropriate clinical pathways, better patient empowerment and engagement, and reduction of certain pre-analytical errors, especially those related to specimen transportation. On the other hand, POCT also poses some limitations and risks, namely the risk of lower accuracy and reliability compared to traditional laboratory tests, quality control and connectivity issues, high dependence on operators (with varying levels of expertise or training), challenges related to patient data management, higher costs per individual test, regulatory and compliance issues such as the need for appropriate validation prior to clinical use (especially for rapid diagnostic tests; RDTs), as well as additional preanalytical sources of error that may remain undetected in this type of testing, which is usually based on whole blood samples (i.e., presence of interfering substances, clotting, hemolysis, etc.). There is no doubt that POCT is a breakthrough innovation in laboratory medicine, but the discussion on its appropriate use requires further debate and initiatives. This collective opinion paper, composed of abstracts of the lectures presented at the two-day expert meeting "Point-Of-Care-Testing: State of the Art and Perspective"(Venice, April 4-5, 2024), aims to provide a thoughtful overview of the state-of-the-art in POCT, its current applications, advantages and potential limitations, as well as some interesting reflections on the future perspectives of this particular field of laboratory medicine.
2025
Inglese
Walter de Gruyter GmbH
63
1
35
51
17
Pubblicato
Esperti anonimi
Internazionale
Goal 3: Good health and well-being
advantages
applications
limitations
point-of-care (POCT)
I dati relativi a volume, numero e pagine sono relativi alla versione elettronica pubblicata nel 2024. L'articolo esce stampato nel Gennaio 2025.
Point-of-care testing: state-of-the art and perspectives / Plebani, M.; Nichols, J. H.; Luppa, P. B.; Greene, D.; Sciacovelli, L.; Shaw, J.; Khan, A. I.; Carraro, P.; Freckmann, G.; Dimech, W.; Zaninotto, M.; Spannagl, M.; Huggett, J.; Kost, G. J.; Trenti, T.; Padoan, A.; Thomas, A.; Banfi, G.; Lippi, G.. - In: CLINICAL CHEMISTRY AND LABORATORY MEDICINE. - ISSN 1434-6621. - 63:1(2025), pp. 35-51. [10.1515/cclm-2024-0675]
open
19
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Plebani, M.; Nichols, J. H.; Luppa, P. B.; Greene, D.; Sciacovelli, L.; Shaw, J.; Khan, A. I.; Carraro, P.; Freckmann, G.; Dimech, W.; Zaninotto, M.; ...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/199345
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