Laboratories in Leverkusen

Medical laboratories in Leverkusen: All accredited referral labs, hospital labs and specialist laboratories in Leverkusen are listed with location, specialisations and contact details. Laboratories in Leverkusen hold DIN EN ISO 15189 accreditation from DAkkS and comply with the RiliBÄK quality control framework. Practices can usually request sample collection kits and courier pick-up directly from the lab.

Directory last updated: April 2026
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    All Laboratories in Leverkusen

    All Laboratories in Leverkusen

    About Laboratories

    Medical laboratories (Medizinische Labore or Laboratorien) are specialist facilities that carry out in-vitro diagnostic examinations of human biological samples, including blood, urine, stool, tissue biopsies, cerebrospinal fluid, swabs and other body fluids. Laboratory diagnostics underpin around 70 percent of all medical treatment decisions and are therefore central to the functioning of the entire healthcare system. In Germany, medical laboratories are regulated by the Medical Devices Act (Medizinproduktegesetz, MPG) and its successor legislation, as well as by the guidelines of the German Medical Association (Bundesärztekammer, BÄK), particularly the Guideline on Quality Assurance in Medical Laboratory Diagnostics (RiliBÄK). All accredited medical laboratories must hold accreditation to DIN EN ISO 15189, the international standard for medical laboratory quality and competence. Laboratory medicine services are provided under the professional supervision of specialists (Fachärzte) in one of three disciplines: laboratory medicine (Laboratoriumsmedizin), microbiology, virology and infection epidemiology (Mikrobiologie), or pathology. Specialist services include clinical chemistry, haematology, coagulation diagnostics, immunology, infectious disease serology, molecular diagnostics (PCR and NGS), cytology, histopathology, toxicology and pharmacogenomics. Results from accredited laboratories are essential for diagnosing diseases, monitoring chronic conditions, guiding antibiotic prescribing and assessing treatment response. This directory covers all medical laboratories in Germany with contact details and locations.

    Medical Laboratory Diagnostics in Germany

    Medical laboratory diagnostics is one of the most data-intensive and technologically advanced segments of the German healthcare system. It is estimated that laboratory results influence approximately 70 percent of all clinical treatment decisions, making accurate and timely laboratory diagnostics central to effective patient care. Germany has a well-developed laboratory medicine infrastructure consisting of large regional laboratory centres (Laborgemeinschaften and Laboratorien) that provide comprehensive diagnostic services to general practitioners and specialist physicians in their catchment area, hospital-based in-house laboratories serving acute clinical needs, and highly specialised reference laboratories offering rare and complex diagnostic tests. The German statutory health insurance system reimburses laboratory services according to the uniform valuation standard (Einheitlicher Bewertungsmaßstab, EBM) for outpatient services and the diagnosis-related groups (DRG) system for inpatient services. Laboratory medicine is also a significant private market, with many patients and employers commissioning health screening panels and occupational health tests on a self-pay basis.

    Accreditation Standards: DIN EN ISO 15189 and RiliBÄK

    The quality and accuracy of medical laboratory results in Germany are governed by two overlapping frameworks. DIN EN ISO 15189 is the international standard for quality and competence in medical laboratories, based on ISO 17025 (general testing laboratory standard) adapted for the specific requirements of clinical diagnostics. Accreditation to DIN EN ISO 15189 by the Deutsche Akkreditierungsstelle (DAkkS) is the formal recognition that a laboratory's quality management system and technical competence meet international benchmarks. It covers the entire pre-analytical, analytical and post-analytical process. The RiliBÄK (Richtlinie der Bundesärztekammer zur Qualitätssicherung laboratoriumsmedizinischer Untersuchungen) complements ISO 15189 by setting mandatory requirements for internal and external quality control specifically for medical laboratories in Germany. Internal quality control using certified reference materials must be performed alongside each analytical run. Participation in approved external quality assurance schemes (ring trials, Ringversuche) is compulsory and results are monitored by the German Medical Association.

    Specialist Disciplines in German Medical Laboratories

    German medical laboratories span several specialist disciplines. Clinical chemistry (Klinische Chemie) covers routine biochemistry including liver and kidney function tests, lipid panels, diabetes monitoring and inflammation markers. Haematology encompasses full blood counts, coagulation testing and blood smear analysis. Microbiology (Mikrobiologie) focuses on the identification of bacterial, viral, fungal and parasitic pathogens from culture, serology and molecular methods, and includes antibiotic susceptibility testing (Antibiogramm). Virology specifically handles serological and molecular detection of viruses including hepatitis, HIV, CMV, EBV and respiratory viruses. Pathology and cytology (Pathologie, Zytologie) analyse tissue biopsies and cell samples for malignant and benign changes. Molecular diagnostics (Molekulare Diagnostik) uses PCR, next-generation sequencing (NGS) and other molecular techniques for infectious disease detection, oncology biomarker testing and pharmacogenomics. Immunology covers autoimmune antibody testing, allergy diagnostics and HLA typing. Toxicology provides drug level monitoring (therapeutic drug monitoring, TDM) and forensic screening.

    Laboratory Structure and Referral Relationships in Germany

    Laboratory medicine services in Germany are organised across three levels of care. Hospital laboratories (central laboratories) provide emergency diagnostics around the clock and analyse patient-proximate samples. Outpatient specialist laboratories (referral laboratories) specialise in external orders: general practitioners send patient samples by courier and receive electronic results, usually within 24 hours. Point-of-care testing (POCT) laboratories enable immediate results directly in the practice or at the bedside, for example troponin tests in suspected myocardial infarction or CRP rapid tests for infections. The billing of laboratory medicine services is handled via the Uniform Value Scale (EBM) for statutory health insurance patients and the GOÄ fee schedule for private patients. Laboratory physician practices operate as independent specialist practices and bill through the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians (KV). Reference laboratories handle particularly complex or rare specialised tests, such as prion diagnostics or tropical infectious diseases. Sanoliste lists all operational forms with specialist area and referral information.

    What is a medical laboratory?

    A medical laboratory carries out diagnostic examinations of blood, urine, tissue and other body samples. In Germany, medical laboratories are regulated under the Medical Devices Act and must hold accreditation to DIN EN ISO 15189. Services are provided by specialists in laboratory medicine, microbiology or pathology.

    What tests are carried out in a medical laboratory?

    Medical laboratories carry out clinical chemistry, microbiology, haematology, pathology and molecular diagnostics. Results provide an essential basis for medical diagnosis and treatment decisions.

    How do I find a medical laboratory near me?

    Your treating physician will normally recommend a suitable sending laboratory for specific tests. The DAkkS accreditation database lists all laboratories accredited to DIN EN ISO 15189 in Germany. Sanoliste provides a searchable directory of medical laboratories sorted by federal state and specialist area.

    What is DIN EN ISO 15189 accreditation and why does it matter?

    DIN EN ISO 15189 is the international standard for quality and competence in medical laboratories. In Germany, accreditation to this standard by the Deutsche Akkreditierungsstelle (DAkkS) is a legal requirement for medical laboratories providing diagnostic services. Accreditation involves a rigorous assessment of the laboratory's technical competence, quality management system, personnel qualifications, equipment calibration, method validation and internal and external quality assurance programmes.

    How many medical laboratories are there in Germany?

    Germany has several hundred fully accredited medical laboratories, ranging from large regional laboratory centres serving multiple hospitals and medical practices to smaller in-house hospital laboratories and specialist pathology or microbiology practices. Many general practitioners and specialist physicians send patient samples to external accredited reference laboratories for analysis.

    What is the RiliBÄK and how does it affect laboratory quality in Germany?

    RiliBÄK stands for Richtlinie der Bundesärztekammer zur Qualitätssicherung laboratoriumsmedizinischer Untersuchungen (Guideline of the German Medical Association on Quality Assurance in Medical Laboratory Diagnostics). It sets mandatory requirements for internal quality control (using control materials) and participation in external quality assurance schemes (ring trials). All laboratories performing diagnostic tests in Germany must comply with RiliBÄK, regardless of whether they are accredited to ISO 15189.

    Can I directly contact a medical laboratory as a patient in Germany?

    In Germany, most medical laboratories work on a B2B basis, receiving samples from physicians, hospitals and other healthcare providers rather than directly from patients. However, some laboratories offer direct patient services (Selbstzahler-Leistungen), allowing individuals to request specific tests without a physician's referral, with results delivered to the patient. These self-pay services are not covered by statutory health insurance but can be useful for health screening. The Sanoliste directory lists laboratories across Germany where you can check directly whether walk-in or self-pay services are available.