NEQAS - Answers
NEQAS - Answers
NEQAS - Answers
Question 1
d) What might be the outcome if your laboratory continues to receive similar results?
If the laboratory continues to receive similar results, we may receive a result in the survey of
Persistently Outwith Concensus which would result in a letter from the scheme director
offering assistance. If we fail to return accurate NEQAS results this may impact the
laboratories UKAS accreditation for this test.
Question 2
Question 3
a) What is this NEQAS exercise assessing and how did your laboratory perform?
This exercise is an ABO grouping/crossmatching assessment. This EQA exercise ensures that
the laboratory is able to establish a patients ABO group correctly and match selected units
appropriately. In this exercise, our laboratory returned an unsatisfactory performance with a
score of 150.
c) You continue to issue similar results. What will you need to consider?
In this scenario, the most concerning consequence of these results is that we may issue ABO
incompatible blood to a patient. If we are not confident that these errors are related to a
NEQAS specific failure (such as data entry or sample handling) then we must immediately
cease processing ABO grouping/crossmatching on site and arrange for this to be done in a
different laboratory.
We must also retrospectively review the ABO/crossmatch requests taken since the last
acceptable NEQAS performance to determine if there may have been any clinical harm from
this. Where appropriate, each patient who may have been affected must be reported to
SHOT and investigated internally as a potential SI. Duty of candour must be completed
where a patient has, or may have, come to harm.
Question 4
b) Calculate the deviation index (%deviation) and state which category this falls into.
(Not a fair question!)
This result is < -3 so falls under the category Requiring Investigation see slide of the
Lab Transfusion talk for more details)
In this case we have also issued incorrect advice which would have resulted in an insufficient
dose of Anti-D and we would not have triggered quantification.
c) What would have been the clinical significance of acting on this result?
In this scenario, the patient would have received an insufficient dose of Anti-D and the
sample would not have been sent for quantification as our result was significantly out of
range. We would need to review the cause of this and may need to perform a clinical review
of all FMH screens performed by the laboratory between this exercise and our previous
acceptable EQA submission.
Question 5
b) What will happen as a consequence and how will this impact on your service?
The laboratory will receive a letter from the scheme director offering assistance in
investigating and resolving the poor EQA performance.
This will not have any impact on our service.
Question 6
(Every now and then you get a NEQAS question which isn’t centered around a result the
clue here is that you get given something that makes no sense to you at all!)
d) Your chromogenic FVIII NEQAS result was within concensus. What is the different between
a chromogenic and a 1-stage Factor VIII assay?
A 1-stage Factor VIII assay is an APTT and clot based assay which determines the ability of
the patient serum to correct the APTT abnormalities in a factor VIII deficient serum sample
at serial dilutions.
A chromogenic Factor VIII assay uses a chromogenic substrate to Factor VIIIa added to
patient serum after other coagulation factors have been removed. This is a two stage assay
as there is an incubation step to allow Factor VIII to activate and then a determination step
to measure this activity.
Question 8
d) How would you monitor and correct the issues in your laboratory?
I would recommend retesting the original NEQAS material if still available and asking NEQAS
for a repeat/new sample. I recommend reviewing staff training in the use of the laboratory
technique. We should review the standard operating procedure and manufacturers
reccomendations for the technique. We should review pre-analytical, analytical and post-
analytical variables. If this fails to determine the cause for the discrepancy we should ask a
different laboratory to process paired samples until such time as we can be confident in the
ability of the laboratory to perform the assay.