[Evaluation of a new automatic hematological system: the Advia 70 (Bayer-Diagnostics)]

Ann Biol Clin (Paris). 2002 Sep-Oct;60(5):541-8.
[Article in French]

Abstract

The Advia 70 hematology system is a new automated analyser manufactured in Texas (USA) by MWI-DANAM and marketed by Bayer- Diagnostics in France. The throughput is 70 complete blood counts (CBC) with leukocyte differential counts (diff) per hour. Three sample modes are proposed: normal mode (180 muL of whole blood), sample saver mode (90 muL) or automatic sampler (180 muL). The principles used on Advia 70 are: 1) electrical impedance for cell counting (WBC, RBC, platelets, MCV) and RBC/plt sizing; 2) multi-dimensional optical system and absorbance for white cell differential. The Advia 70 has been evaluated in our laboratory over a three-week period. Within-run variations of blood counting (CBC & diff) were determined on normal and abnormal patient specimens whereas between run-variations were determined on normal controls. Linearity and detection limits were also tested. The Advia 70 system results were reproducible and reliable. The correlations between the various sample modes were very good. Contamination and store assays were performed. Thirty normal and abnormal samples were successively analysed on the Advia 70 system and on the Advia 120 system which methodologies are different (myeloperoxidase staining coupled with flow cytometry-nuclear lobularity analysis for WBC/Diff, flow cytometry and laser diffraction for RBC/platelets), and the results were compared: despite the different technologies used on both analysers, the correlations were very good (CBC and diff parameters). Finally, we evaluated the leukocyte differential flags on 72 patients samples with abnormal cells, using the blood smear examination as the reference method. In conclusion, the Advia 70 can be used in private and hospital laboratories.

Publication types

  • Evaluation Study

MeSH terms

  • Autoanalysis / instrumentation
  • Blood Cell Count / instrumentation*
  • Calibration
  • Equipment Design
  • Flow Cytometry / instrumentation*
  • Hematologic Tests / instrumentation*
  • Humans
  • Reference Standards
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Sensitivity and Specificity
  • Time Factors