HHE Pathology 2019 | Page 10

PATHOLOGY AND DIAGNOSTICS Traceability in laboratory medicine: what is it and why is it important? Reducing the between-method variability in laboratory medicine is required to improve patient outcomes and traceability to global reference materials and reference methods enables manufacturers to deliver methods that give equivalent results Graham Beastall PhD FRCPath University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK Globalisation affects all areas of life, including healthcare. For globalisation to have a positive influence, it is necessary to have global standards and units to which all measurements are traceable. We are familiar with global standards for time, temperature, mass and length and these standards, coupled with Système Internationale (SI) units, ensure that these parameters can be measured anywhere in the world with a small measurement uncertainty, enabling the safe transfer of data between global stakeholders. The same principle should apply to measurements made, and results used, in healthcare. Laboratory medicine is an essential clinical specialty providing users with pivotal information for the prevention, diagnosis, treatment and management of health and disease. Laboratory medicine has several specialisms including clinical chemistry, genetics, haematology, immunology, microbiology and transplantation. Laboratory medicine results provide information that impacts a high percentage of clinical decisions in healthcare. This central role means that laboratory medicine specialists have a professional responsibility to provide a high- quality service that is optimised to the needs of the patient. 1 A high percentage of laboratory medicine results are obtained using commercially produced in vitro diagnostic (IVD) test systems. The global market for these IVD products was estimated at $61 billion in 2016, with a growth rate of 4.6% per annum. 2 Many companies are involved in producing IVD test systems. Unfortunately, it is common for the results obtained from different IVD test systems for the same analyte to be unacceptably high. Therefore, one increasingly important quality objective is to ensure that patient test results are traceable (equivalent) between different methods, laboratories and healthcare systems over time. 3 Equivalence of test results is being achieved through the process of harmonisation in laboratory medicine. The aim of harmonisation is to provide accurate, actionable and transferable patient results, which can facilitate improved clinical outcomes and patient safety. Harmonisation in laboratory medicine has a wide scope. It can be applied across the total testing process of laboratory medicine, including requests, samples, measurements and reports. 4 The many dimensions of harmonisation require 10 HHE 2019 | hospitalhealthcare.com active involvement at local, national and international levels. 5 The importance of reducing between- method variability There are several reasons why efforts should be made to reduce between-method variability in laboratory medicine. 4 These include: • Patient safety: Differences in practice and variability of results put patients at risk. Harmonisation of patient results should contribute to improved clinical outcomes • Patient empowerment: Healthcare is increasingly patient-centred. Patients expect results from laboratories and from self-testing to be identical and method independent • Public confidence: The public will be reassured by the knowledge that patient results are accurate and transferable between laboratories • Laboratory accreditation: The ISO 15189:2012 standard used for medical laboratory accreditation requires trueness of measurement and metrological traceability • Clinical guidelines: The successful implementation of clinical practice guidelines often links patient management to specific values or changes in patient results • Clinical governance: Differences between patient results leads to concerns about the quality and professionalism of the service that is provided • Consolidation and networking: Laboratory networks providing services to both primary and secondary care should be able to provide similar results from any laboratory site • Informatics: Laboratory information systems and hospital information systems will only be able to share and transfer results if they are harmonised • Electronic patient record: National electronic patient records require that patient results may be inserted from any laboratory and so they should be transferable. Reasons why methods might give different results on a patient sample Patients and the public naturally assume that all methods for measurement of a single analyte will give the same result on a patient sample. For some simple analytes, such as plasma glucose, the results will be very similar. However, for more complex analytes, the results might vary considerably. There are many potential reasons