| Literature DB >> 25880934 |
Matthew D Krasowski1, Deborah Chudzik2,3, Anna Dolezal2, Bryan Steussy2, Michael P Gailey2, Benjamin Koch2, Sara B Kilborn2, Benjamin W Darbro4, Carolyn D Rysgaard2, Julia A Klesney-Tait5.
Abstract
This case study over time describes five years of experience with interventions to improve laboratory test utilization at an academic medical center. The high-frequency laboratory tests showing the biggest declines in order volume post intervention were serum albumin (36%) and erythrocyte sedimentation rate (17%). Introduction of restrictions for 170 high-cost send-out tests resulted in a 23% decline in order volume. Targeted interventions reduced mis-orders involving several "look-alike" tests: 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D, 25-hydroxyvitamin D; manganese, magnesium; beta-2-glycoprotein, beta-2-microglobulin. Lastly, targeted alerts reduced duplicate orders of germline genetic testing and orders of hepatitis B surface antigen within 2 weeks of hepatitis B vaccination.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25880934 PMCID: PMC4344785 DOI: 10.1186/s12911-015-0137-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ISSN: 1472-6947 Impact factor: 2.796
Original settings in electronic medical record
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| Allowable frequencies for repetitive ordering of laboratory tests | All frequencies possible (ranging from multiple times daily to once per week) |
| Review of electronic order sets | Limited review by pathology; many order sets converted without major modification from paper requisitions or from previous EMR |
| Duplicate ordering of tests | Limited to cancellations by laboratory information system if same test(s) ordered on exact same collect time |
| Send-out tests | Generic prompt on all send-outs (i.e. not customized to any particular testing) |
| Restriction of tests requiring approval (‘laboratory formulary’) | No |
| Laboratory test charges | Not posted in EMR |
Changes to electronic medical record affecting laboratory test ordering
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| Allowable frequencies for repetitive ordering of laboratory tests | Customized to tests | July 2012 |
| Review of electronic order sets | All order sets with laboratory tests reviewed by pathology (pathology informatics and medical director) prior to release to production environment | September 2009 |
| Duplicate ordering of tests | • Expanded duplicate checking to catch overlap of testing (e.g., glucose ordered individually at same time as basic metabolic panel that also included glucose order) | • October 2009 |
| • Instituted Best Practice Alert warning for attempt at duplicate orders of germline genetic tests | • January 2011 | |
| Send-out test warnings | • Removed generic send-out test prompt | May to July 2012 |
| • Instituted specific warnings with hard-stops customized to tests to include one or more of the following: | ||
| - High cost and very high cost warnings | ||
| - Long turnaround time warnings | ||
| - Genetic counseling prompt | ||
| - Reflex testing warning (if applicable) | ||
| Restriction of tests requiring approval (formulary) | Instituted restrictions on 170 tests that required pathologist or clinical specialist approval prior to ordering | July 2012 |
| - 164 tests required pathologist approval | ||
| - 4 tests required infectious disease attending approval | ||
| - 2 tests required neurology attending approval | ||
| Interventions targeting specific tests | Instituted based on review (see Table | Various times 2009-2012 |
| Laboratory test charges | Posted in EMR for most tests (either as discrete charges or range of possible charges) | July 2012 |
Examples of specific interventions within electronic medical record order entry system
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| 1,25-Dihydroxyvitamin D | Mis-orders (25-hydroxyvitamin D intended) | • Specific warning prompt | October 2009 |
| • Education | |||
| • Correction of order sets | |||
| Manganese | Mis-orders (usually erroneously ordered for magnesium) | • Specific warning prompt | November 2009 |
| Hepatitis B surface antigen | False positives due to recent administration by hepatitis B vaccine | Best Practice Alert if testing ordered within two weeks of recent vaccination | September 2011 |
| Beta-2-microglobulin | Mis-orders for beta-2-glycoprotein, particularly in obstetrics | • Specific warning prompt | June 2010 |
| • Correction of order sets | |||
| Complete blood count (CBC) with differential | Repetitive over-ordering of CBC with differential when CBC alone would suffice | Restricted repetitive ordering options of differential to once daily | June 2012 |
Maximum repetitive order frequencies available by single order
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| Once | CBC differential |
| Blood smear morphology review by technologist or pathologist | |
| Albumin | |
| Alpha-fetoprotein | |
| Amylase | |
| Angiotensin converting enzyme | |
| C-Peptide | |
| C-Reactive Protein | |
| CA-125 | |
| Epstein-Barr virus serologies | |
| Hemoglobin A1C | |
| Hemoglobin electrophoresis | |
| Lipase | |
| Lipids (cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein, low-density lipoprotein, triglycerides) | |
| Molecular pathology (e.g., Factor V Leiden genotyping) | |
| Phosphorus | |
| (Most) Send-out testing | |
| Thyroid stimulating hormone | |
| Every 72 hours | Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate |
| Serum free light chains (kappa/lambda) | |
| Daily | Basic metabolic panel |
| Electrolyte panel | |
| Once per week |
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| Histoplasma antigen | |
| Serum and urine protein electrophoresis |
Most common issues detected by and subsequently corrected following pathology review of draft EMR order sets
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| Erroneous inclusion of test that had similar name to intended test | • Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) isoforms instead of LDH |
| • Amylase isoforms instead of amylase | |
| • Confusion of beta-2-microglobulin and beta-2-glycoprotein | |
| Confirmatory/specific test used instead of common screening test | • Hepatitis B DNA instead of hepatitis B surface antigen |
| • Hepatitis C RNA instead of hepatitis C antibody | |
| • HIV viral load instead of HIV antigen/antibody combo assay | |
| Repetitive ordering of common tests, either too frequent time intervals or for too long duration or both | • Basic metabolic panel (sodium, potassium, carbon dioxide, chloride, calcium, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, glucose) |
| • Complete blood count (with or without differential) | |
| • Blood gases | |
| • Lactate | |
| • Liver enzymes (e.g., alanine aminotransferase, aspartate aminotransferase) | |
| • Osmolality | |
| Selection of obsolete testing or low yield testing | • |
| • Antibody assays for fungi endemic to Iowa (e.g., |
Figure 1Changes in laboratory test ordering. Data is broken down into high frequency tests (core laboratory chemistry and hematology testing excluding CBC with differential), CBC with differential, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), and restricted send-out testing with effects on (A) frequency of ordering (adjusted for patient days) and (B) average annual savings. The pre-intervention period was two years leading up to interventions (changes in ordering frequency options; institution of restricted send-out testing) in July 2012. The post-intervention period is two years following that into July 2014. *P < 0.005, **P < 0.001.
Figure 2Ordering patterns of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D and 25-hydroxyvitamin D. (A) Annual test volumes for 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D from 2000 to 2014 (annual volume for 2014 estimated based on data through 7/22/2014); (B) Annual test volumes for 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D from 2007 to 2014 (annual volume for 2014 estimated based on data through 7/22/2014), broken down by location of order – inpatient unit or outpatient clinics; (C) Annual test volumes for 25-dihydroxyvitamin D from 2000 to 2014 (annual volume for 2014 estimated based on data through 7/22/2014). Subset of data for 25-dihydroxyvitamin D up to October 2012 has been previously published [53]. The arrows indicate date that new EMR was introduced.