| Literature DB >> 26524965 |
Jasna Lenicek Krleza1, Adrijana Dorotic2, Ana Grzunov1, Miljenka Maradin3.
Abstract
Capillary blood sampling is a medical procedure aimed at assisting in patient diagnosis, management and treatment, and is increasingly used worldwide, in part because of the increasing availability of point-of-care testing. It is also frequently used to obtain small blood volumes for laboratory testing because it minimizes pain. The capillary blood sampling procedure can influence the quality of the sample as well as the accuracy of test results, highlighting the need for immediate, widespread standardization. A recent nationwide survey of policies and practices related to capillary blood sampling in medical laboratories in Croatia has shown that capillary sampling procedures are not standardized and that only a small proportion of Croatian laboratories comply with guidelines from the Clinical Laboratory Standards Institute (CLSI) or the World Health Organization (WHO). The aim of this document is to provide recommendations for capillary blood sampling. This document has been produced by the Working Group for Capillary Blood Sampling within the Croatian Society of Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine. Our recommendations are based on existing available standards and recommendations (WHO Best Practices in Phlebotomy, CLSI GP42-A6 and CLSI C46-A2), which have been modified based on local logistical, cultural, legal and regulatory requirements. We hope that these recommendations will be a useful contribution to the standardization of capillary blood sampling in Croatia.Entities:
Keywords: blood specimen collection; capillary blood; preanalytical phase; recommendations; standardization
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26524965 PMCID: PMC4622200 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2015.034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
Figure 7Steps in the skin puncture technique.
Figure 1a. Microcontainer labelled with a barcode. b. Capillary labelled with a barcode. c. A barcode containing at least two independent identifiers. The patient’s first and last names and laboratory identification number must be present on the label.
Figure 2Recommended procedure for immobilizing a pediatric patient during capillary blood sampling. A parent should sit in the phlebotomy chair and place the child in his or her lap. For immobilizing the child’s legs, parent should put own legs around the child’s in a cross-legged pattern. The parent should take own arm opposite to that of the child’s arm receiving the skin puncture, extend it across the child’s chest and immobilize the child’s free arm by tucking it under own. To secure the elbow on the child’s arm to receive the puncture, the parent should use the same hand while using other hand to secure the wrist on the child’s arm to receive the puncture.
Figure 3Recommendations for finger pricking. The puncture must be on the palm-up surface of the distal segment (fingertip) of the middle or ring finger (a). The puncture should be made across the fingerprint, not parallel to it (b).
Figure 4Recommendations for heel pricking. The lateral limits of the calcaneus are marked by a line extending posteriorly from a point between the 4th and 5th toes and running parallel to the lateral aspect of the heel, as well as by a line extending posteriorly from the middle of the big toe and running parallel to the medial aspect of the heel. The light blue area indicates the recommended puncture site. The red and yellow areas indicate where puncture must not be performed.
Recommended incision depth depends on age and recommended puncture site.
| Premature neonates | heel | 0.85 mm |
| Infants under 6 months of age | heel | 2.0 mm |
| Child aged 6 months | finger | 1.5 mm |
| Child older than 8 years and adults | finger | 2.4 mm |
Figure 5Recommended steps in capillary blood collection. After site puncture, wiping and elimination of the first drop, a second drop of blood forms. The healthcare worker touches the tip of the microcollection device to the drop, and blood flows by capillary action when microcollection device is capillaries (or if microcontainer have adapter for capillary sampling) or the gravity-flow principle for microcollection device without adapter.
Figure 6a. Capillary mixing. After the capillary has been filled, a metal mixing bar is inserted into the tube before ends of the capillary are closed. The sample is mixed by moving the metal bar using a magnet. The magnet should be moved from one end of the capillary to the other five times. b. Mixing of microcollection devices with adapter for capillary sampling. After microcontainer has been filled and adapter for capillary blood was removed, microcontainer have to be closed with device cup. Inversion mixing have be preformed acording manufacturer’s instructions.
| 1. | Structure of the paper. The manuscript comprises three main chapters: Introduction, Recommendations, and Limitations. In the Recommendation section, the different recommendations are numbered from 1 to 22, then there are three paragraphs (Dry blood spot sampling, Capillary blood sampling for POCT, Recommended capillary blood sampling procedures in specific situations and in the presence of complications) and then a section of Questions and Answers. For an easier reading, I suggest that these three paragraphs should be numbered (from 23 to 25) as they also contain Recommendations; furthermore I suggest including a heading for the Question and answering section. | The section “Questions and Answers” replaced with Recommendations 21-24. | |
| 2. | Pain control in newborns. In my opinion, the issue deserves more attention in the paper, since the heel pricks is a painful procedure. | New text about pain control in newborns added to | |
| 3. | The flow chart indicated as “Steps in the skin puncture technique” is | The flow chart indicated as “Steps in the skin puncture technique” correctly labeled as | |
| 4. | In the text the word “level” is used to indicate the blood concentration of analytes; the term “concentration” is perhaps more appropriate. | “Level” replaced with “concentration” throughout text. | |
| 5. | Both CLSI and WHO documents should be referenced. | CLSI and WHO documents now referenced. | |
| 6. | Reference ( | All references checked, corrected when necessary and rearranged, including reference | |
| 7. | Even though it is self-explanatory (these are the recommendations and no other approach is admitted), it could be useful to stress that no other disinfectant rather than a volatile alcohol must be used to do not affect the capillary blood sampling. | Suggestion accepted and point stressed in Recommendation 13. | |
| 8. | Earlobe puncture. This approach is widely adopted in sports medicine to monitor lactate concentrations that may provide a guide to an optimal training intensity. Ideally, lactate concentrations should be measured during a training session and immediately reported to the athlete to ensure that the athlete is working at the desired intensity. In many sports (e.g. cycling, ski, climbing, rowing) earlobe is the only or most accessible site. This is probably outside the scope of the document. Otherwise it could be interesting to mention this specific field of utilization of the earlobe puncture. | Text edited to mention this specific use of earlobe puncture in Recommendation 10.3. | |
| 9. | Reference ( | All references checked, corrected when necessary and rearranged, including reference | |
| 10. | Reference ( | Reference | |
| 11. | Ref. | All references checked, corrected when necessary and rearranged. | |
| 12. | The same is for ref. | All references checked, corrected when necessary and rearranged. | |
| 13. | In the references, when web address is cited often the typo Acessed for Accessed is found. Please correct. | Corrected. | |
| 14. | In the references, some journal is cited with the full title instead of the official title abbreviation. Please check. | References checked and all journal titles now cited using official abbreviations. | |
| 15. | Certain parts of the text are shaded gray. The assumption is that these are the specific recommendations of the working group (WG) that have to be emphasized. Maybe authors should consider having these parts additionally marked as: Recommendation 1, Recommendation 2... Or entitle these for example as a Recommendation for the sample labelling…etc. to clarify to the readers that these are specific recommendations of this Society. | Gray sections removed and reformatted as Recommendations. | |
| 16. | Furthermore, in the individual sections it should be clearly emphasized what is the recommendation of the authors, or whether the authors for a particular procedure refer themselves to the guidelines that already exist in the literature. | The Working Group’s recommendation now clearly emphasized in all Recommendations. | |
| 17. | My suggestion to the authors is harmonization of names and expressions in the recommendations. For example through the all manuscript authors use different terminology for the personnel involved in phlebotomy or capillary blood drawn: healthcare blood sampling specialist, laboratory technicians, sampling specialist, patient identifiers, healthcare professional, professional, healthcare worker, health worker, workers. To my opinion this should be harmonized. | Terminology harmonized as “health worker” to refer to personnel involved in phlebotomy or capillary blood drawing. | |
| 18. | Special attention should be given to the order of presentation of certain facts in the particular chapters which consequently indicate certain recommendation of the Working Group. I suggest to the authors to reorganize the paragraph. It would be better to start at first with the known facts (In Croatia, capillary sampling...) and the recent findings (...A recent survey of clinical labs...) and then make a conclusion on whether is procedure sufficiently standardized, and consequently the need for setting the guidelines. | Text edited according to the reviewer’s suggestions, and a new “Recommendations” section added. | |
| 19. | To my opinion, despite grammatically correct language the quality of the presentation can be improved by using language that is more common in laboratory and in accordance with the writing of the documents (recommendations). Specific comments are listed below. | Text edited according to the reviewer’s suggestions, and the Working Group’s recommendations now clearly indicated in all Recommendations. | |
| 20. | Specific comment and suggestions: | Text edited according to the reviewer’s suggestions. | |
| 21 | What about non-alcohol disinfectants and it is not clear on how do the lukewarm water should be provided as material at the workplace. | Non-alcohol disinfectant is added as well as lukewarm tap water (for washing hands and for the purposes of arteriolisation proceedings). | |
| 22 | Authors stated that capillary tubes should be labelled before skin puncture. Authors stated that capillary tubes should label after the blood collection because label can interfere with collection. Please provide clearer information on this. | Recommendation 7 is restructured. The labelling is performed before or after sampling depends on the policy of the healthcare institution. | |
| 23 | Pg14Ln10-24 It is not clear whether there is consensus on the recommended puncture depth or not? If there is, I suggest to the authors to give information on logical order recommendation on depth from neonates to adults. In addition, what is recommendation of the Working group? | ||
| 24 | Pg2Ln10-30 It is not completely clear what the authors’ intendment to say in this paragraph. Do their recommendations have been issued in accordance with existing guidelines or do the Working group guidelines are taken from the above mentioned guidelines, or do the authors previously studied above-mentioned guidelines in order to set their own guidelines? Nevertheless, given that there is a chapter on Recommendations, it would be desirable to put these information’s in section on Recommendations. | The Working Group’s recommendations now clearly indicated in all Recommendations. | |
| 25 | Text in the grey box. It is a little unclear whether this applies to every referral from or just to specific ones, because it is known that hospital referrals have no information for example about the patient’s address but such data is possible to find in an electronic database associated with patients unique hospital number. | Gray sections removed, and the corresponding text marked as Recommendations. | |
| 26 | Ref | All references checked and corrected when necessary. | |
| 27 | Comment on the text section related to the existing Croatian standards for capillary blood sampling published by the CCMB, page 3, line 2: the existing recommendations available on the web page: | This reason, and several others, now highlighted in order to explain why the authors decided to develop these recommendations as a first step to national standardization. | |
| 28 | Suggestion for the sentence: “The capillary tubes and capillary blood collection tubes should (rather than can) be labelled with labels”. But, these labels can be those used for tubes for venous blood sampling or can be appropriate small labels as presented at | Text edited according to reviewer’s suggestion and presented as Recommendation 7. | |
| 29 | The most important comment and suggestion that should be corrected in the present version of the manuscript is related to the text section on page 25, lines 14 to 34: the previous results related to potential differences of hematological parameters between capillary and venous blood samples should be more precise. The authors quoted that several studies showed differences of several hematological analytes while other studies did not. What is the relevant information for the readers in the context of the best evidence literature data? Is there any newer (recent) literature data related to the comparison of platelet count in capillary and venous blood? Instead the term “significantly higher”, the exact differences should be listed if the data available from the reference no. 48 or others. It is very important issue related to the capillary blood sampling since the large number of samples for all pediatric population is obtained by capillary sampling. On the other hand, for the same pediatric patient, sample for complete blood count is often obtained by both, venous and capillary blood sampling during hospitalization period. In any case, please, try to give much more precise information related to this important issue on capillary sampling for complete blood count. | More details given about previous studies on differences between venous and capillary analytical results. See also our response to Comment 38. | |
| 30 | In Introduction, word “increasingly” is repeated in the same section twice (line two and line five). I would suggest using some of synonyms: more and more, progressively, to an increasing extent, even more. | Text edited according to reviewer’s suggestion. | |
| 31 | In Acknowledgments there are typewrite mistakes. It is not clearly stated if there is one author or more authors. In first sentence it should stand: The authors are grateful (or: The author is grateful); Laboratory should be written with capital letter. In second sentence only one author thanks Nora Nikolac, and then in third sentence there is more than one author. | Text corrected by a native-speaking English editor. | |
| 32 | Reference | All references checked, corrected when necessary and rearranged. | |
| 33 | Reference | All references checked, corrected when necessary and rearranged. | |
| 34 | Reference | Title in the reference corrected and URL confirmed. To obtain information on capillary blood sampling, the user should scroll down on the same page. | |
| 35 | Could the authors give some introductory sentence about steps involved in capillary blood sampling before the first paragraph on page 3, line 19? | Text edited according to reviewer’s suggestion and presented in new “Recommendations” section. | |
| 36 | The recommendations are very comprehensive, but can the authors provide a written shorter version, similar to what is shown in | Such text added to the Introduction. | |
| 37 | Blood smear is also one of the tests mostly performed on capillary blood and I suggest including it to the manuscript (fresh drop of patient’s blood or EDTA blood from microteiner is recommended?). | Blood smear is including in Recommendation 24.5. | |
| 38 | Also, laboratory should not report the results of potassium and calcium from capillary blood except at the insistence of doctors after they meet with possible deviations. | Document focuses on capillary blood sampling, not on post-analytical procedures. | |
| 39 | In abstract, one sentence is little clumsy: “How the sampling is performed can influence the test results”. For abstract, it would be more appropriate to write: “The way of capillary sampling can influence...”.or “The manner in which sampling is performed can influence...“. | Abstract edited and rearranged based on reviewer’s suggestion. | |
| 40 | Expiry dates of all supplies - should they always be checked by the person performing the skin puncture (similar to the H04-A6 document) or may they be checked in other ways? | Text edited according to reviewer’s suggestion and source added. | |
| 41 | Latex allergy check - is this still valid as most countries have abandoned Latex gloves? | This recommendation retained because it forms part of international standards (refs. | |
| 42 | A notation needed that labelled capillary blood collection tube and labelled capillary tube barcodes are congruent? | Rendered unnecessary because of other changes. | |
| 43 | Figure text to | Text added to | |
| 44 | Reference list - Please check that abbreviations of publications are correct and punctuation according to | All references checked and corrected when necessary. | |
| 45 | The flowchart step figure should be labelled as | The flow chart “Steps in the skin puncture technique” now referred to as | |
| 46 | Keywords: I suggest to include the keyword: guideline. | “Recommendations” added to keywords and all text because this document is recommendation for capillary blood sampling, not gudeline.“ | |
| 47 | Recommendation 1.2: in my opinion the weight of the patient is more important than the age. | Both criteria (age and weight) recommended. | |
| 48 | A recommend to add a checklist of what to do. | Checklist of capillary blood sampling presented as | |
| 49 | Page 4, first paragraph: in the additional material “automatic mixing device” should be added | “Automatic mixing device” added as additional material in Recommendation 1. | |
| 50 | “Identifying the patient”- shouldn´t be the wrist band mentioned? | Text edited according to reviewer’s suggestion and presented as Recommendation 5. | |
| 51 | Page 12, paragraph 3, and point (b): the mistake in the text: “on the palm-up surface of fingertips (!!) because the distance between the skin surface and bone in the newborns varies from 1.2 to 2.2 mm, so typical lancet depth can easily injure the heel (!!) bone, and because finger (!!) puncture in newborns… | Text edited and mistake removed. | |
| 52 | Arterialization of the puncture site: Many authors support the use of dry heating of the puncture site (not moist towel) as the wet skin make the blood drop forming more difficult. | We recommend cleansing the skin puncture site after arterialization. | |
| 53 | “Bandaging the skin…”: I suppose to use the term of “accompanying person” instead of “parent” | “Accompanying person” used instead of “parent”. | |
| 54 | Sentence: “If no satisfactory sample can be collected after two attempts, the health care worker should consider venous blood sampling instead” - in many cases the arterial blood is more appropriate sample than venous one for acid-base, etc | Sentence edited according to reviewer’s suggestion. | |
| 55 | Page 26, the second paragraph: the Sentence “Steps in the skin puncture technique” is without any sense here... | Sentence removed. | |
| 56 | Page 7 Line 37: In addition, clinical or laboratory staff about to perform... | Sentence rearranged. | |
| 57 | It is not always suitable to use these fingers because of calluses, scars in certain professions e.g. brick layers, farmers hence may need to indicate that need to go to the side of the finger where skin is thinner/softer or use of the small finger | We prefer to retain our recommendations because they are consistent with all available literature; the fifth finger is not recommended for puncture because of the short distance between the skin surface and bone. | |
| 58 | The incision should be made quickly and appropriately according to the manufacturer’s instructions. | Sentence edited. | |
| 59 | Page 24: Line 39: 2. excessive “milking” of the puncture site. | Sentence edited. | |
| 60 | Page 26 Line 24: The authors are grateful …. | Text corrected by native English-speaking editor. | |
| 61 | I think the paragraph considering who should NOT have performed capillary sampling ought to be placed earlier in the paper? | We prefer not to make statements about who cannot perform capillary blood sampling, since available standards and regulations stipulate only who can perform such sampling. | |
| 62 | The limitations would be better presented in a Table. | We prefer to present this information within the text. | |