RESUMO
INTRODUCTION: The type of blood collection tube used when obtaining samples for therapeutic drug monitoring (TDM) has important implications on the accuracy of results. Serum tubes without a gel separator are currently considered best practice. We sought to evaluate the performance of Barricor™, a novel plasma tube that utilizes an inert mechanical separator, as well as a gel-based tube (PST™) for testing acetaminophen, digoxin, gentamicin, methotrexate, phenobarbital, phenytoin, salicylate, vancomycin, valproic acid, carbamazepine, and theophylline on a Roche Cobas® 8000 platform. METHODS: Paired patient samples were collected from individuals taking at least one of the medications evaluated. These were supplemented with spiked specimens to ensure a minimum of 40 paired samples per drug. All drugs were measured within two hours of collection on Roche e602 or c502 instruments. Deming regression was used to assess bias between Barricor™ vs serum and PST™ vs serum. Seven-day refrigerated stability was also assessed in Barricor™, PST™, and serum tubes in a subset of samples (n = 10) for each drug. RESULTS: Drug concentrations in Barricor™ were similar to serum for each drug assessed. In contrast, a negative bias was observed in PST™ compared to serum tubes for carbamazepine (-7.6%) and phenytoin (-6.8%) although this did not surpass our total allowable error goal of 10%. All drugs recovered within ±10% of baseline value when samples were stored refrigerated for 7 days except for carbamazepine, phenytoin, and phenobarbital where significant analyte loss was observed within the first day in PST™ tubes. CONCLUSION: Barricor™ tubes are a suitable alternative to serum for TDM on the Roche Cobas® 8000 platform.