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629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization

BACKGROUND: Screening tests for malaria diagnosis should be reported rapidly because of its potential for rapid progression to severe disease and relatively high mortality. Guidelines recommend a high level of expertise for microscopy diagnosis and a laboratory test result turnaround time (TAT) ≤ 2...

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Autores principales: LeBlanc, Louiselle, Rosa, Alexie, Martigny, Didier, Lapointe, Anne-Audrey, Ricard-Lacombe, Antoine, Malick, Mandy, Lévesque, Simon, Martin, Philippe, Provost, Émile, Bélanger, Stéphanie, Arsenault, Christine
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10679374/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.695
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author LeBlanc, Louiselle
Rosa, Alexie
Martigny, Didier
Lapointe, Anne-Audrey
Ricard-Lacombe, Antoine
Malick, Mandy
Lévesque, Simon
Martin, Philippe
Provost, Émile
Bélanger, Stéphanie
Arsenault, Christine
author_facet LeBlanc, Louiselle
Rosa, Alexie
Martigny, Didier
Lapointe, Anne-Audrey
Ricard-Lacombe, Antoine
Malick, Mandy
Lévesque, Simon
Martin, Philippe
Provost, Émile
Bélanger, Stéphanie
Arsenault, Christine
author_sort LeBlanc, Louiselle
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Screening tests for malaria diagnosis should be reported rapidly because of its potential for rapid progression to severe disease and relatively high mortality. Guidelines recommend a high level of expertise for microscopy diagnosis and a laboratory test result turnaround time (TAT) ≤ 2 hours. Meeting these requirements can be challenging in the era of global laboratory centralization. METHODS: Multicenter retrospective cohort study comparing negative (2012-2021) and positive (2014-2023) malaria screening results within and between 2 central laboratories/tertiary academic centers in Quebec, Canada, in addition to data from one center’s primary care affiliated sites. RESULTS: 1296 negative malaria tests were analyzed for complete analytical cycle TAT: Center A n=225 (central lab n=100; affiliated sites n=125), and Center B n=1120. After rapid diagnostic test (RDT) implementation, all sites have significantly reduced delays and ≤ 2h TAT compliance is > 90% for central labs (median: A 38 min, B 53min). But affiliated sites’ compliance is low at 19.6% (median 6h12) with delays mostly attributable during transit between labs (median TAT from central lab sample intake is 25 min). Comparison of positive malaria result TATs to negative result TATs for both server lab centers will be presented, with a trend to longer delays to smear results for negative RDTs (median 4h13) vs positive RDTs (3h33). Detailed results from central lab – affiliated sites model will be presented with several practical recommendations. In preliminary results, no cases were diagnosed solely with thick smear, suggesting little added sensitivity in our center when used in addition to RDT + thin smear. CONCLUSION: Quality and timely malaria diagnostic services are crucial for urgent clinical decisions given the potential for high morbidity and mortality. TATs are necessary lab quality management indicators during laboratory centralization and data for each component of malaria testing identifies weak links in the diagnostic chain. Such studies provide opportunities for quality and efficiency improvement, and for restructuring testing algorithms accordingly. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
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spelling pubmed-106793742023-11-27 629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization LeBlanc, Louiselle Rosa, Alexie Martigny, Didier Lapointe, Anne-Audrey Ricard-Lacombe, Antoine Malick, Mandy Lévesque, Simon Martin, Philippe Provost, Émile Bélanger, Stéphanie Arsenault, Christine Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Screening tests for malaria diagnosis should be reported rapidly because of its potential for rapid progression to severe disease and relatively high mortality. Guidelines recommend a high level of expertise for microscopy diagnosis and a laboratory test result turnaround time (TAT) ≤ 2 hours. Meeting these requirements can be challenging in the era of global laboratory centralization. METHODS: Multicenter retrospective cohort study comparing negative (2012-2021) and positive (2014-2023) malaria screening results within and between 2 central laboratories/tertiary academic centers in Quebec, Canada, in addition to data from one center’s primary care affiliated sites. RESULTS: 1296 negative malaria tests were analyzed for complete analytical cycle TAT: Center A n=225 (central lab n=100; affiliated sites n=125), and Center B n=1120. After rapid diagnostic test (RDT) implementation, all sites have significantly reduced delays and ≤ 2h TAT compliance is > 90% for central labs (median: A 38 min, B 53min). But affiliated sites’ compliance is low at 19.6% (median 6h12) with delays mostly attributable during transit between labs (median TAT from central lab sample intake is 25 min). Comparison of positive malaria result TATs to negative result TATs for both server lab centers will be presented, with a trend to longer delays to smear results for negative RDTs (median 4h13) vs positive RDTs (3h33). Detailed results from central lab – affiliated sites model will be presented with several practical recommendations. In preliminary results, no cases were diagnosed solely with thick smear, suggesting little added sensitivity in our center when used in addition to RDT + thin smear. CONCLUSION: Quality and timely malaria diagnostic services are crucial for urgent clinical decisions given the potential for high morbidity and mortality. TATs are necessary lab quality management indicators during laboratory centralization and data for each component of malaria testing identifies weak links in the diagnostic chain. Such studies provide opportunities for quality and efficiency improvement, and for restructuring testing algorithms accordingly. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10679374/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.695 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
LeBlanc, Louiselle
Rosa, Alexie
Martigny, Didier
Lapointe, Anne-Audrey
Ricard-Lacombe, Antoine
Malick, Mandy
Lévesque, Simon
Martin, Philippe
Provost, Émile
Bélanger, Stéphanie
Arsenault, Christine
629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization
title 629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization
title_full 629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization
title_fullStr 629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization
title_full_unstemmed 629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization
title_short 629. Malaria Screening Turnaround Time: Comparative Multicenter Analysis of Negative and Positive Results and Impacts of Rapid Diagnostic Test Implementation and Laboratory Centralization
title_sort 629. malaria screening turnaround time: comparative multicenter analysis of negative and positive results and impacts of rapid diagnostic test implementation and laboratory centralization
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10679374/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.695
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