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An international study on activated partial thromboplastin time prolongation. Part 2 : Interpretative commenting

Bauça, Josep Miquel ; Ajzner, Éva LU ; Cadamuro, Janne ; Hillarp, Andreas LU ; Kristoffersen, Ann Helen and Meijer, Piet (2022) In Clinica Chimica Acta 535. p.174-179
Abstract

Background: Providing evidence-based interpretative comments (IC) is an integral task of clinical laboratory professionals. It may be of special relevance for coagulation testing, where pathological first-line tests could trigger more specialized tests. Our aim was to evaluate the quality of ICs provided to the physician in two samples with activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) prolongation. Material and methods: Two lyophilized plasma samples and their respective fictional clinical cases (case 1: heparin contamination and case 2: factor VIII deficiency) were sent to European laboratories for APTT and APTT mixing test measurement, and elaboration of ICs based on their results. The quality of ICs was evaluated in terms of... (More)

Background: Providing evidence-based interpretative comments (IC) is an integral task of clinical laboratory professionals. It may be of special relevance for coagulation testing, where pathological first-line tests could trigger more specialized tests. Our aim was to evaluate the quality of ICs provided to the physician in two samples with activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) prolongation. Material and methods: Two lyophilized plasma samples and their respective fictional clinical cases (case 1: heparin contamination and case 2: factor VIII deficiency) were sent to European laboratories for APTT and APTT mixing test measurement, and elaboration of ICs based on their results. The quality of ICs was evaluated in terms of analytical classification, laboratory interpretation, advice to physician, clarity, length and whether the clinical question was answered. Results: A total of 214 laboratories were included. Classification of the analytical result was stated in 57 % of comments. Laboratory interpretation was found in 91 % of comments for case 1 and 83.3 % for case 2, among which 9.3 % and 6.5 % were considered wrong, respectively. Advice for the requesting physician was provided in 65.8 % of comments for case 1 and 61.2 % for case 2, among which 36 % and 4.7 % were considered wrong, respectively. More than 70 % of comments for both cases were evaluated as clear and of an adequate length. Conclusion: A significant number of laboratories provide clear interpretations and helpful advice for the management of altered coagulation results. Nevertheless, the finding of several confusing and misleading comments highlights the need for recommendations on elaboration of interpretative comments.

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author
; ; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Coagulation tests, Interpretation, Laboratory diagnosis, Mixing test
in
Clinica Chimica Acta
volume
535
pages
174 - 179
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • pmid:36055391
  • scopus:85137304105
ISSN
0009-8981
DOI
10.1016/j.cca.2022.08.026
language
English
LU publication?
no
additional info
Publisher Copyright: © 2022
id
17b7e30d-2a2d-45f3-a1a6-54e31f9a8b78
date added to LUP
2024-12-06 10:27:53
date last changed
2025-02-14 16:18:42
@article{17b7e30d-2a2d-45f3-a1a6-54e31f9a8b78,
  abstract     = {{<p>Background: Providing evidence-based interpretative comments (IC) is an integral task of clinical laboratory professionals. It may be of special relevance for coagulation testing, where pathological first-line tests could trigger more specialized tests. Our aim was to evaluate the quality of ICs provided to the physician in two samples with activated partial thromboplastin time (APTT) prolongation. Material and methods: Two lyophilized plasma samples and their respective fictional clinical cases (case 1: heparin contamination and case 2: factor VIII deficiency) were sent to European laboratories for APTT and APTT mixing test measurement, and elaboration of ICs based on their results. The quality of ICs was evaluated in terms of analytical classification, laboratory interpretation, advice to physician, clarity, length and whether the clinical question was answered. Results: A total of 214 laboratories were included. Classification of the analytical result was stated in 57 % of comments. Laboratory interpretation was found in 91 % of comments for case 1 and 83.3 % for case 2, among which 9.3 % and 6.5 % were considered wrong, respectively. Advice for the requesting physician was provided in 65.8 % of comments for case 1 and 61.2 % for case 2, among which 36 % and 4.7 % were considered wrong, respectively. More than 70 % of comments for both cases were evaluated as clear and of an adequate length. Conclusion: A significant number of laboratories provide clear interpretations and helpful advice for the management of altered coagulation results. Nevertheless, the finding of several confusing and misleading comments highlights the need for recommendations on elaboration of interpretative comments.</p>}},
  author       = {{Bauça, Josep Miquel and Ajzner, Éva and Cadamuro, Janne and Hillarp, Andreas and Kristoffersen, Ann Helen and Meijer, Piet}},
  issn         = {{0009-8981}},
  keywords     = {{Coagulation tests; Interpretation; Laboratory diagnosis; Mixing test}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{10}},
  pages        = {{174--179}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Clinica Chimica Acta}},
  title        = {{An international study on activated partial thromboplastin time prolongation. Part 2 : Interpretative commenting}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cca.2022.08.026}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.cca.2022.08.026}},
  volume       = {{535}},
  year         = {{2022}},
}