| Literature DB >> 31223257 |
Ana Bronić1, Desiree Coen Herak2, Sandra Margetić1, Marija Milić3,4.
Abstract
A modern diagnostic laboratory offers wide spectrum of coagulation assays utilized in the diagnosis and management of patients with haemostatic disorders, preoperative screening and anticoagulation therapy monitoring. The recent survey conducted among Croatian medical biochemistry and transfusion laboratories showed the existence of different practice policies in particular phases of laboratory process during coagulation testing and highlighted areas that need improvement. Lack of assay standardization together with non-harmonized test results between different measurement methods, can potentially lead to incorrect decisions in patient's treatment. Consequently, patient safety could be compromised. Therefore, recommended procedures related to preanalytical, analytical and postanalytical phases of prothrombin time, activated partial thromboplastin time, thrombin time, fibrinogen and D-dimer testing are provided in this review, aiming to help laboratories to generate accurate and reliable test results.Entities:
Keywords: blood coagulation tests; guidelines; haemostasis; harmonization; standardization
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31223257 PMCID: PMC6559624 DOI: 10.11613/BM.2019.020503
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Med (Zagreb) ISSN: 1330-0962 Impact factor: 2.313
| Information on suspected or established diagnosis as well as on anticoagulant therapy should be an integral part of the coagulation test request. | 10 | ||
| Preparation of patient prior to venipuncture and appropriate identification of patient during venipuncture should be in compliance to National recommendations for venous blood sampling. | 10 | ||
| 1. Venous blood specimens for coagulation testing should be collected into glass or plastic test tubes, both containing non-activating surfaces. | 11,13 | ||
| 2. Test tubes should contain buffered trisodium citrate as anticoagulant, preferably at concentration of 105-109 mmol/L, also referred as 3.2% trisodium citrate. | 11 | ||
| 3. The proportion of blood to anticoagulant volume should always be 9:1. | 11 | ||
| 4. Samples with +/- 10% of the fill line, corresponding to 90-110% fill volume could be accepted for analysis. | 11,12-14 | ||
| 1. Collection of blood samples for coagulation testing should be in compliance to National recommendations for venous blood sampling. | 10 | ||
| 2. Prior to collection of specimen for coagulation testing through an intravenous catheter, it is recommended to flush the central catheter line with saline and to discard first 5 mL of blood or 6-times of the line volume or if collected from a capped off peripheral venous catheter, twice of the catheter and extension set dead space volume should be discarded. | 8,10,11,15 | ||
| 1. The coagulation tube has to be collected preferably before any other tube with additive (by clot activator or anticoagulant). | 11,13,14 | ||
| 2. There is no need to first draw a discard tube prior to collecting specimens for routine coagulation tests and D-dimers. The exception of this rule includes a procedure when a winged blood collection set should be used, as the air in the tubing leads to the under filling of the test tube. A discard tube in this case should be a non-additive. | 10,11,14 | ||
| Each laboratory should have defined criteria for rejecting unsuitable specimens for coagulation testing. | 8,11,16 | ||
| 1. Plasma samples for determination of screening assays, aPTT, TT, fibrinogen as well as D-dimers, should be prepared by centrifugation of primary collection tube at ambient temperature (18-25 °C), at 1500xg for 15 minutes. | 11,13,17 | ||
| 2. All plasma samples that should be frozen until analysis, should be double centrifugated prior to freezing to obtain platelet poor plasma (PPP), containing < 10 x109/L platelets. | 16,17 | ||
| 1. The final concentration of the citrate in the test tube should be adjusted in order to maintain the appropriate blood to anticoagulant ratio at 9:1 in samples with haematocrit values above 0.55 L/L. | 11,18 | ||
| 2. On the test report, it should be always indicated that citrate volume in the test tube was adjusted due to high haematocrit values: “Coagulation assays are performed in samples with adjusted volume of anticoagulant (citrate) due to high haematocrit value (Hct = xx L/L).”, where xx represents the exact amount of haematocrit. | 11,13,18 | ||
| 1. For coagulation screening assays laboratories should evaluate acceptable concentration of interfering substances for their own system (reagent/coagulometer). | 19,20 | ||
| 2. If intravascular or | 11,19,20 | ||
| 3. Use of mechanical and/or electromechanical clot detection methods is recommended whenever it is possible for samples that contain substances interfering with light transmission. | 11 | ||
| 1. Specimens for all haemostasis assays should be kept capped (in an unopened tube) at ambient temperature (18-25 °C) until analysis. | 11,12,20 | ||
| 2. Testing for all coagulation assays should be performed within 4 hours after blood collection. The exception of this rule could be applied to PT and D-dimer testing, for which specimens can be stored at ambient temperature for up to 24 hours after blood collection, either uncentrifuged or centrifuged with plasma remaining on the top of the cellular component in an unopened tube. | 11,20,21 | ||
| 3. Laboratories that accept specimens for PT and D-dimer testing stored within 24 hours of blood collection should confirm sample stability with their own system. | 21 | ||
| 4. If aPTT testing is requested for UFH monitoring, specimens should be centrifuged and plasma should be removed from cells within 1 hour of collection. | 11,16,21 | ||
| 5. If testing for any haemostasis assay is not possible within the allowed time, plasma should be removed from the cells after centrifugation and immediately frozen at – 20 °C or below for short-term storage (up to two weeks) or at – 70 °C for up to six months. | 16,20 | ||
| 1. If coagulation specimens should be sent to distant laboratories for analysis, samples should arrive in the testing laboratory in real time to allow analysis within appropriate timeframes specified for each assay. If it is not possible to transport specimens within appropriate timeframes for analysis, blood samples should be processed as it is described in previous section as recommendation 5. | 16,20 | ||
| 2. Each vial with specimen that should be sent at distant laboratories for analysis, should be labelled with the patient’s full name, date of birth, identification number (insurance number or unique identification number in laboratory). In addition, sample type ( | 16,20 | ||
| 3. Frozen plasma specimens should be transported preferable on a dry ice, and if not possible on sufficient amount of regular ice in a Styrofoam container in order to keep the samples solidly frozen until they arrive at the laboratory. | 5,8,11 | ||
| 1. Thawing of frozen plasma samples should be performed rapidly, for 10 minutes, at 37 °C in an incubator, dry thermo block or water bath. | 5,16,20,23 | ||
| 2. To ensure sample integrity prior to testing, thawed sample should be thoroughly mixed by the gentle inversion of sample for 180° and return to starting position for 6-times. | 23 | ||
| 1. Internal quality control (IQC) plasma should be analysed always following opening or/and reconstitution of new reagent, calibration, preventive coagulometer maintenance and repair. | 27 | ||
| 2. For quantitative coagulation tests, as a minimum two levels of control material including both normal and pathological control plasma should be run every eight hours of continuous operation. Different IQC schedule could be allowable if laboratory has analysed its own working process and performed the risk analysis prior to use. | 27,29 | ||
| 3. External quality assessment should be essential part of the total quality management in coagulation laboratory. | 27,29 | ||
| For implementation of coagulometers into daily practice, evaluation and validation of procedures should be performed in compliance to previously published recommendations. | 26 | ||
| 1. Recombinant thromboplastins with ISI values below 1.2 should be used for PT determination. | 29-33 | ||
| 2. ISI value for a specific combination of thromboplastin/coagulometer should be used whenever it is possible. If specific ISI is not available it should be determined locally. | 29,30,32 | ||
| 1. To perform aPTT as a screening test, it is recommended to use aPTT reagents sensitive to factor deficiency and UFH therapy, but at the same time they do not have to be sensitive to LA. | 4,29,34 | ||
| 2. aPTT assay is an appropriate assay for UFH therapy monitoring. | 35 | ||
| 3. If aPTT is used for UFH therapy monitoring, general recommendation for laboratories is to test the sensitivity of aPTT reagents in order to establish appropriate therapeutic interval. | 35-37 | ||
| 4. aPTT should not be used for LMWH monitoring. For estimating LMWH therapeutic response anti-Xa assay should be used exclusively. | 38 | ||
| Thrombin time should not be used for monitoring anticoagulant therapy with haeparin or thrombin inhibitors as it is too sensitive and not standardized for this purpose. | 39,40 | ||
| 1. Fibrinogen functional assay is the most reliable method for routine use in clinical laboratory. | 42 | ||
| 2. Fibrinogen immunoassays that measure concentration of fibrinogen rather than its functional activity are recommended in differential diagnosis of dysfibrinogenemia. | 39,42 | ||
| 3. Derived fibrinogen assay is not recommended for routine laboratory use. | 42,44,45 | ||
| 1. D-dimer results, reference intervals and cut-off values should be interpreted depending on method that laboratory use. | 47,48 | ||
| 2. D-dimer measurement method should be pointed out on the test report along with the test results. | 48-50 | ||
| 2. If reference intervals are adopted from the literature or manufacturer, it is recommended to verify if such intervals are appropriate for a local population. | 25,53 | ||
| 3. The use of age-adjusted reference intervals is critical for ensuring proper management of children with thrombosis or bleeding disorders. | 54 | ||
| 1. PT results should be reported as percentage if patients are not on VKA therapy. | 29,30,51 | ||
| 2. INR should not be reported for patients not receiving VKA. | 30 | ||
| 3. The INR system for reporting PT results should be used exclusively for VKA therapy monitoring. | 29,30 | ||
| The aPTT ratio should always be reported together with the result expressed in seconds. | 29,35-37 | ||
| The TT test should be reported in seconds. | 39,40 | ||
| Fibrinogen functional assay should be reported in g/L. | 42 | ||
| 1. D-dimer results should be expressed as mg/L DDU or FEU. | 46-48 | ||
| 2. D-dimer measurement method in use should be declared on the test report along with the test result. | 46-48 | ||
| 3. Assay kits that do not provide information about the type of unit used (DDU or FEU) in the assay should not be used. | 46-48 | ||
| Interpretative comments, related to the both, preanalytical and analytical phases of testing, as well as those related to the extension of the original clinical request, are strongly recommended and should be an integral part of the test report whenever it is justified. | 56 | ||
| 1. Coagulation laboratories are encouraged to define locally clinical relevant critical limits and/or expand the existing list of critical values in conjunction with local clinical opinion. | 57,59 | ||
| 2. The first critical result should be reported immediately to the physician, and depending on the agreement with the clinical staff, reporting of the each following critical results for the same patient should be managed. | 57,59 | ||
| 3. INR value > 5.0 is considered clinically relevant as it requires urgent intervention in order to reduce the warfarin anticoagulant effect. | 58 | ||
| 4. For UFH monitoring, any aPTT ratio greater than 2.5 times of the upper limit of the reference interval should be discussed with clinicians as it could indicate increased bleeding risk. | 57 | ||
| 5. Fibrinogen values lower than 0.8 g/L could indicate an elevated bleeding risk and should be immediately reported to a clinician. | 57,59 | ||
| PT - prothrombin time. aPTT - activated partial thromboplastin time. TT - thrombin time. ISI- International Sensitivity Index. INR - International Normalized Ratio. LMWH - low molecular weight heparin. UFH - unfractionated heparin. VKA - vitamin K antagonist. DDU - D-dimer units. FEU - fibrinogen equivalent units. LA - lupus anticoagulant. | |||