| Literature DB >> 32943102 |
Amy K Beckman1, Valerie L Ng2, David L Jaye3, Manila Gaddh4, Sarah A Williams5, Sophia L Yohe5, Lin Zhang6, Michael A Linden5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Peripheral blood smears are performed to evaluate a variety of hematologic and non-hematologic disorders. At the authors' institutions, clinician requests for pathologist-performed blood smear reviews have increased in recent years. Blood smears may contribute significantly to pathologists' workloads, yet their clinical value is variable, and professional reimbursement rates are low. This study aimed to identify clinical scenarios in which smear review is likely to provide value beyond automated laboratory testing.Entities:
Keywords: Blood film; Peripheral smear; Test utilization; Utilization management
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32943102 PMCID: PMC7500005 DOI: 10.1186/s13000-020-01033-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diagn Pathol ISSN: 1746-1596 Impact factor: 2.644
Indication for and added clinical value of clinician-initiated blood smear reviews
| Indication | Smears for this indication, among all smears performed (%) | Smears with added clinical value, among smears performed for this indication (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Any | 515 (100%) | 118 (23%) |
| Any RBC abnormality | 259 (50%) | 48 (19%)a |
| Any WBC cell abnormality | 126 (24%) | 32 (25%)a |
| Any PLT abnormality | 150 (29%) | 20 (13%)a |
| Any cytosis | 53 (10%) | 18 (34%) |
| Erythrocytosis | 2 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| Leukocytosis | 42 (8%) | 18 (43%) |
| Thrombocytosis | 12 (2%) | 1 (8%) |
| Any cytopenia | 267 (52%) | 45 (17%) |
| Anemia | 179 (35%) | 32 (18%) |
| Leukopenia | 79 (15%) | 11 (14%) |
| Thrombocytopenia | 135 (26%) | 18 (13%) |
| Any abnormal cell morphology | 39 (8%) | 9 (23%) |
| RBC morphology | 22 (4%) | 4 (18%) |
| WBC morphology | 6 (1%) | 3 (50%) |
| PLT morphology | 5 (1%) | 1 (20%) |
| Hematolymphoid neoplasm | 65 (13%) | 30 (46%) |
| Blasts | 5 (1%) | 2 (40%) |
| Hemolysis | 100 (19%) | 24 (24%) |
| Parasites | 4 (1%) | 1 (25%) |
| Other | 55 (11%) | 15 (27%) |
| Not specified | 33 (6%) | 6 (18%) |
aThe proportion of smears with potential clinical value differed significantly across these three categories of indications (p = 0.0375)
RBC Red blood cell, WBC White blood cell, PLT Platelet
Fig. 1Percentage of clinician-initiated peripheral smear reviews by indication compared to percentage of smear reviews with added clinical value, by indication
Findings among individual smears requested for select indications
| Indication | Findings seen among individual smears requested for the specified indication |
|---|---|
| Leukocytosis | • Atypical / variant lymphoid cells |
| • Findings consistent with a hemoglobinopathy | |
| • Leukemia or blasts | |
| • Rouleaux | |
| Anemia | • Atypical/variant lymphoid cells |
| • Dysplasia | |
| • Findings consistent with a hemoglobinopathy | |
| • Hemolysis | |
| • Leukemia or blasts | |
| • Other | |
| • Platelet abnormality | |
| • Rouleaux | |
| Leukopenia | • Atypical/variant lymphoid cells |
| • Dysplasia | |
| • Findings consistent with a hemoglobinopathy | |
| • Hemolysis | |
| • Leukemia or blasts | |
| • Platelet abnormality | |
| Thrombocytopenia | • Atypical/variant lymphoid cells |
| • Dysplasia | |
| • Hemolysis | |
| • Leukemia or blasts | |
| • Platelet abnormality | |
| • Rouleaux | |
| Hemolysis | • Dysplasia |
| • Findings consistent with a hemoglobinopathy | |
| • Hemolysis | |
| • Leukemia or blasts | |
| • Other | |
| • Platelet abnormality | |
| • Rouleaux |
Studies examining the clinical value of peripheral blood smear review
| Author, publication date, and institution | Study subjects and design | Results | Authors’ conclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
Fairbanks et al. [ Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota | 2 blood smears per subject (24 normal controls + 38 patients with IDA) reviewed, for the purposes of the study, by 9 staff and resident hematologists | Among all interpretations: • False positives (IDA reported on a control patient): 5.8% • False negatives (IDA not reported on IDA case): 51.0% • Consensus among all 9 reviewers: 5 of 38 blood smears from IDA patients Average intra observer variability (discrepancy when a reviewer reviewed the same smear twice): 22% | “Except when morphologic changes are pronounced, the diagnosis of iron deficiency anemia from examination of the peripheral blood film is difficult and not very reliable.” |
Jen et al. [ Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts | 288 anemic inpatients with blood smears reviewed in the context of clinical care by laboratory staff, with or without physician review | • Only 5 of 11 (45%) common RBC morphologic abnormalities showed both inter- and intra-observer reproducibility better than chance. • Among patients evaluated for iron, folate, or B12 deficiency, red cell indices showed similar or better specificity and positive predictive value than blood smear interpretation. • Among smears interpreted by laboratory staff, additional physician interpretation yielded “unique” diagnostic information in no cases and “helpful” information in 2.2% of cases. | • “Blood smear readings are poorly reproducible, are no better than RBC indices for screening for possible deficiency states, and only occasionally provide unique information.” • “The physician’s reading is most important for the confirmation of abnormal WBC morphology and is most likely to add incremental value in patients whose elevated reticulocyte counts suggest hemolysis.” |
Simmons et al. [ Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington, DC | 12 cases of anemia with blood smear and clinical and CBC data reviewed, for the purposes of the study, by 65 residents, fellows, and staff physicians | • Access to a peripheral smear did not significantly change the number or appropriateness of tests ordered. • Access to a peripheral smear did not significantly improve the reviewer’s ability to make a correct diagnosis. | “RBC review, even when accurate, does not improve clinical problem solving across a variety of common anemias and among a broad cross section of residents, internists, and hematologists.” |
Kurt-Mangold et al. [ University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics | Chart review of patients associated with 277 clinician-ordered peripheral blood smear reviews | • 68% of smear review reports included unique data beyond that already described in the medical record. • 52% of smear review results were not mentioned in patients’ clinical notes. • Data obtained from peripheral smear review impacted clinical decision making in 1% of cases. | “Only rarely do [data from peripheral blood smear review] appear to be clinically significant and the information frequently overlaps with information already provided by laboratory-initiated smear reviews.” |
CBC Complete blood count, IDA Iron deficiency anemia, RBC Red blood cell