In this blog
we will consider just the mean potassium result for samples taken in the ED,
plotted here in a statistical process chart (Figure
3).
Figure
3 Statistical process chart for mean monthly
potassium taken in the ED. Mean results pre and post analyser change are shown
(dotted lines). Results within 2 standard deviations of the mean prior to the
analyser shift (solid line) are shown in the shaded area
We can see a
shift in the ED mean potassium in March 2018. In the language of the SPC, the
system went “out of control.” This correlates with the laboratory switching its
analyser provider.
Correlation with EQA performance
We can look
at the performance of the laboratory in the external quality assurance scheme
over these periods. The following plot (Figure
4) shows the bias of different
analysers in this scheme. This laboratory moved from the 13OL, which has a
strong negative bias, to the 13BO analyser, which has a positive bias. It is
not therefore surprising that we saw the shift in laboratory mean when the analysers
were changed.
The impact of the shift in laboratory
performance on patients
Although
potassium results essentially form a continuous distribution, clinicians tend
to view these as categorical results (see blog 2 Table
1). This means that it is not that meaningful to look at
distribution parameters if we are to understand the clinical impact of changes.
Instead, we need to look at how this impacts on the proportion of results that
fall into different result categories
Using theoretical “normal” populations
to model the analyser effect
To analyse
this, we applied a theoretical distribution to our data (using a technique
called Kernel Density Estimation; Figure
5). We then calculated the impact of the shift in the
potassium mean (due to the analyser change) on the expected numbers of patients
who would fall into each category.
Figure 5
Histograms of potassium results from the ED before and after analyser change,
with theoretical distributions as determined by KDE analysis.
We can use
these distributions to calculate the proportion of results falling into
different result categories before and after the analyser switch (Table 2).
Table 2 Proportion of ED potassium results falling
into different result categories before and after analyser change in 2018.
(Note the normal range is from 3.5 to 5.3 inclusive)
We can then
apply these proportions to the number of patients that are tested in our ED
each year (approximately 27000 tests;Table 3). In our small ED, 2 patients a day would have been
diagnosed with hypokalaemia on the old analyser, but would be normal with the
current analyser. 3 patients a week are diagnosed with a significantly higher
potassium since the switch to the new analyser.
Table 3 Predicted change in annual number of
patients in different result categories before and after analyser change.
Conclusions
We are making
no value judgement about which analyser is correct. This blog merely notes the
effect that laboratory performance has on patient outcome – 3% of ED potassium
results are significantly altered (i.e. change category) merely by changing the
analyser.
Setting aside
wider considerations of normality and uncertainty, there are mechanisms to
remove these biases in laboratory performance. For instance, real time inter-laboratory
comparison of performance with continual adjusting of parameters can ensure
that result distributions remain constant.
For the
non-biochemist, it is hard to understand how different analysers can produce
different results when, according to the ISO15189 standard to which they all
comply, all measurands must be traceable back to an international standard.
These are clinically important uncertainties that are perhaps under-recognised.
With the aim to provide a reliable link to patients journey of well-being, ABHA pathology laboratory was incepted in 2001. Understanding the liability of a pathologist in the diagnosis for patients, we have always adopted a modern concept and made our laboratory a well defined, high-tech laboratory. We have five different departments for specific diagnosis.
ReplyDeletePathology lab in bopal
Pathology laboratory in bopal Ahmedabad