Literature DB >> 9930076

Internal quality assurance activities of a surgical pathology department in an Australian teaching hospital.

I M Zardawi1, G Bennett, S Jain, M Brown.   

Abstract

AIM: To assess the role of a quality assurance programme in improving the service provided by a surgical pathology department.
METHODS: A continuous internal quality assurance study of the activities of an anatomical pathology department in an Australian teaching hospital was undertaken over a five year period. This addressed all steps involved in the production of a surgical pathology report. These were addressed in an open forum which included technical, scientific, clerical, and medical staff. Minor errors not needing immediate action were discussed and incorporated into laboratory practice. For major discrepancies with potential implications for patient management supplementary reports were issued and the relevant clinician informed of the outcome.
RESULTS: Comprehensive peer review of 8.9% of the total workload of the department (3530 cases) and all the frozen sections (916 cases) over a period of five years, beginning in 1991, led to comments on some aspects of the original report by the reviewer in 19.6% of the cases. The great majority of the comments were minor, concerning issues related to the microscopic findings (4%), macroscopic description (3.1%), clerical aspects (3%), typographical errors (3%), coding errors (2.7%), technical errors including poor sections and incorrect labelling (1.7%), inadequate clinical history (1.2%), and incomplete or incomprehensible diagrams (0.9%). In two cases (0.05%) the original report did not state proximity of the tumour to surgical margins and in three of the frozen sections (0.3%) the original diagnosis was incorrect. However, in these cases the frozen section assessment did not alter the overall management of the cases.
CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights the importance of a review system in detecting errors in surgical pathology reporting. Recognition of the fact that surgical pathology is not infallible has improved the end product. It has also minimised interobserver variability in the department, resulting in a uniform approach among the pathologists to macroscopic description, specimen sampling, special stains, and histological reporting.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9930076      PMCID: PMC500909          DOI: 10.1136/jcp.51.9.695

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Clin Pathol        ISSN: 0021-9746            Impact factor:   3.411


  14 in total

1.  Locally organised medical audit in histopathology.

Authors:  A D Ramsay
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1991-05       Impact factor: 3.411

2.  Recommendations on quality control and quality assurance in anatomic pathology. Association of Directors of Anatomic and Surgical Pathology.

Authors: 
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  1991-10       Impact factor: 6.394

3.  Interinstitutional comparison of performance in breast fine-needle aspiration cytology. A Q-probe quality indicator study.

Authors:  R J Zarbo; P J Howanitz; P Bachner
Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med       Date:  1991-08       Impact factor: 5.534

4.  Audit in histopathology: description of an internal quality assessment scheme with analysis of preliminary results.

Authors:  J A Zuk; W E Kenyon; M W Myskow
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1991-01       Impact factor: 3.411

5.  Quality assurance. 2. Internal quality control.

Authors:  D Kilshaw
Journal:  Med Lab Sci       Date:  1987-01

6.  Accuracy of frozen section diagnosis in surgical pathology: review of a 1-year experience with 24,880 cases at Mayo Clinic Rochester.

Authors:  J A Ferreiro; J L Myers; D G Bostwick
Journal:  Mayo Clin Proc       Date:  1995-12       Impact factor: 7.616

7.  The clinicopathological meeting. A means of auditing diagnostic performance.

Authors:  H M McBroom; A D Ramsay
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  1993-01       Impact factor: 6.394

8.  Surgical pathology sign-out. Routine review of every case by a second pathologist.

Authors:  R E Safrin; C J Bark
Journal:  Am J Surg Pathol       Date:  1993-11       Impact factor: 6.394

9.  Quality assurance of histopathologic diagnoses: a prospective audit of three thousand cases.

Authors:  M E Whitehead; J E Fitzwater; S K Lindley; S B Kern; R C Ulirsch; W F Winecoff
Journal:  Am J Clin Pathol       Date:  1984-04       Impact factor: 2.493

10.  Interobserver variation in the diagnosis and grading of dyskaryosis in cervical smears: specialist cytopathologists compared with non-specialists.

Authors:  J P O'Sullivan; S M Ismail; W S Barnes; A R Deery; E Gradwell; J A Harvey; O A Husain; G Kocjan; G McKee; R Olafsdottir
Journal:  J Clin Pathol       Date:  1994-06       Impact factor: 3.411

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  1 in total

1.  Benign proliferative breast diseases among female patients at a sub-Saharan Africa tertiary hospital: a cross sectional study.

Authors:  Christopher Okoth; Moses Galukande; Josephat Jombwe; Dan Wamala
Journal:  BMC Surg       Date:  2013-04-01       Impact factor: 2.102

  1 in total

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