Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9755055 Microchemical Journal 2005 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
Biological monitoring is essential for risk assessment in the presence of exposure of workers or the general population to harmful chemical agents. Besides the choice of analytical methods which are fit for purpose and the skills of the analysts, the performance of laboratories, including those working in the field of environmental and occupational medicine, also depends on other technical factors such as frequency of testing, the use of well maintained and properly functioning equipment and the implementation of quality control procedures including the participation in External Quality Assessment Schemes (EQAS). Surveys of laboratory workload have been organized periodically since 1997 within the MeTos Project, an Italian national EQAS for biomarkers of environmental and occupational exposure to chemical agents. In 2001, a more extensive survey, including specific technical issues, was organized as part of the activities of the Thematic Network of European Organizers of External Quality Assessment/Proficiency Testing Schemes Related to Occupational and Environmental Medicine (Network survey). In addition, information on the awareness and implementation of the new requirement for laboratories to estimate the uncertainty of their measurements was collected since 2000. The results of these surveys are reported and compared here. In all surveys, Pb in blood was the biomarker most frequently determined. As for biomarkers of exposure to organic compounds, the data collected in the Network survey indicate that methylhippuric acid, hippuric acid and mandelic acid in urine were the assays most commonly performed. About a third of the participants stated that they estimate the uncertainty of at least some of their measurements. Preliminary analysis of data, limited to Pb in blood, showed that analytical performance improved with continuous participation in EQAS and was positively influenced by a high workload.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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