EMPIR project enables biotechnology guidance to be included in new standards

New standards will improve nucleic acid and cell counting measurements to support advances in biotechnology

New standards will improve nucleic acid and cell counting measurements to support advances in biotechnology

 

Completed EMPIR project New underpinning standards for improved bio-analytical measurement in Biotechnology & In vitro Diagnostics (16SIP01, Bio-stand) enabled guidance from previous EMRP projects for nucleic acid quantification and cell counting to be included in new standards through two ISO committees (ISO TC/276 Biotechnology and ISO TC/212 In-vitro diagnostics).

 

This work contributed to the development of five international standards for counting biological entities, important for diagnosing respiratory infections and identifying microbial pathogens.

 

The project has provided input to the following published standards:

ISO 17511:2020 In vitro diagnostic medical devices – Requirements for establishing metrological traceability of values assigned to calibrators, trueness control materials and human samples

ISO 17822: 2020 In vitro diagnostic systems – Nucleic acid amplification-based examination procedures for detection and identification of microbial pathogens – Laboratory quality practice guide

ISO 20395: 2019 Biotechnology – Requirements for evaluating the performance of quantification methods for nucleic acid target sequences – qPCR and dPCR

ISO 20391-1: 2018 Biotechnology – Cell counting – Part 1: General guidance on cell counting methods

ISO 20391 – 2: 2019 Biotechnology – Cell counting – Part 2: Experimental design and statistical analysis to quantify counting method performance

Project Coordinator John Black from the National Measurement Laboratory (NML) at LGC said:

‘These standards have already had a significant impact within the user communities. One of these (ISO 20395:2019 Requirements for evaluating the performance of quantification methods for nucleic acid target sequences – qPCR and dPCR) has been made freely available by ISO to support the development and implementation of effective COVID-19 testing. The European Commission also highlighted this work as one of their research and innovation initiatives to help tackle the spread of coronavirus and preparedness for other outbreaks’.

This EMPIR project is co-funded by the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and the EMPIR Participating States.

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