Table 2.
Analytical technology category (example) | Assay characteristics | Assay controls and requirements |
---|---|---|
Definitive assay example (mass spectrometry) | Accuracy, trueness (bias), precision, sensitivity, LLOQ; ULOQ, specificity, dilution linearity, parallelism, assay range | Requires calibrators and uses a regression model to calculate absolute values for sample with an unknown amount of analyte |
Relative quantitative assay example: LBA | Precision, trueness (bias) reproducibility, sensitivity, LLOQ; ULOQ, specificity, dilution linearity, parallelism, and assay range | Requires a standard curve and low/medium/high controls; quantitation is relative not absolute |
Quasi‐quantitative assay (flow cytometry) | Precision, sensitivity, specificity, and assay range | No calibration standard, a continuous response as a characteristic of a test sample |
Qualitative assay (IHC) | Reproducibility, sensitivity, and specificity | Discrete scoring scales or binary outcome (yes/no) |
IHC, immunohistochemistry; LBA, ligand‐binding assay; LLOQ, lower limit of quantification; ULOQ, upper limit of quantification.