Journal:ISO 15189 accreditation: Navigation between quality management and patient safety

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Full article title ISO 15189 accreditation: Navigation between quality management and patient safety
Journal Journal of Medical Biochemistry
Author(s) Plebani, Mario; Sciacovelli, Laura
Author affiliation(s) University-Hospital of Padova, Italy
Primary contact Email: mario dot plebani at unipd dot it
Year published 2017
Volume and issue 36 (3)
Page(s) 225–230
DOI 10.1515/jomb-2017-0038
ISSN 1452-8266
Distribution license Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported
Website https://www.degruyter.com/view/j/jomb.2017.36.issue-3/jomb-2017-0038/jomb-2017-0038.xml
Download https://www.degruyter.com/downloadpdf/j/jomb.2017.36.issue-3/jomb-2017-0038/jomb-2017-0038.xml (PDF)

Summary

Accreditation is a valuable resource for clinical laboratories, and the development of an international standard for their accreditation represented a milestone on the path towards improved quality and safety in laboratory medicine. The recent revision of the international standard, ISO 15189, has further strengthened its value not only for improving the quality system of a clinical laboratory but also for better answering the request for competence, focus on customers’ needs and ultimate value of laboratory services. Although in some countries more general standards such as ISO 9001 for quality systems or ISO 17025 for testing laboratories are still used, there is increasing recognition of the value of ISO 15189 as the most appropriate and useful standard for the accreditation of medical laboratories. In fact, only this international standard recognizes the importance of all steps of the total testing process, namely extra-analytical phases, the need to focus on technical competence in addition to quality systems, and the focus on customers’ needs. However, the number of accredited laboratories largely varies between European countries, and major differences affect the approaches to accreditation promoted by the national bodies. In particular, some national accreditation bodies perpetuate the use of fixed scopes, while the European co-operation for Accreditation (EA) and the European Federation of Laboratory Medicine (EFLM) Working Group promote the use of flexible scopes. Major issues in clinical laboratory accreditation are the verification of examination procedures for imprecision, trueness and diagnostic accuracy, and for estimating measurement uncertainty. In addition, quality indicators (QIs) are a fundamental requirement of the ISO 15189 international standard.

Keywords: medical laboratory accreditation, ISO 15189, flexible scope, quality, quality indicators

Introduction

Medical laboratories play an increasingly central role in modern health care systems, as laboratory data are an integral part of the physicians’ decision-making processes, enabling them to: a) identify risk factors and detect a predisposition to a disease, b) confirm or reject a diagnosis, c) guide patient management, and d) monitor the efficacy of therapy through dose-tailoring (personalized medicine).

To successfully achieve these goals, each medical laboratory should strive to assure quality, namely accuracy of results, safety (quality in the total testing process) and efficiency (cost containment). This, in turn, requires the management of medical, scientific, and technical expertise, by obtaining and properly utilizing resources such as personnel, laboratory equipment, supplies, and facilities. Implementation of ISO 15189 provides a foundation for quality in medical laboratories by linking the quality management system (QMS) to competence in all procedures and processes used in the total testing process (TTP).[1] If the QMS should be defined as "a set of interrelated or interacting elements that organizations use to direct and control how quality policies are implemented and quality objectives are achieved," in the case of medical laboratories, the TTP should be viewed as a set of interrelated and interacting processes starting from an appropriate request and sample collection to produce analytical results that have to be transformed into useful clinical information to allow better diagnoses and therapies.[2]

In the world of ISO standards, ISO 15189 is the only standard specifically implemented for a health care unit. It represents the achievement of a very important pathway, in which it was recognized that laboratory medicine, in the health care system, is an organization with a higher awareness about the importance of quality in the entire TTP and in which staff competence plays a predominant role as well. ISO 15189 accreditation guarantees the implementation of processes and procedures that comply with approved international and national guidelines that are the expression of laboratory good practice, but, first and foremost, also assures the competence of staff and the activities in which they are involved. In order to assure that ISO 15189 accreditation provides real added value to a laboratory, the lab must take into account:

  • training of staff concerning accreditation's purpose;
  • achieving awareness that all processes and procedures have to be implemented on the basis of the test purpose;
  • interpreting correctly each requirement of ISO 15189;
  • gaining knowledge of the guidelines that can lead towards the compliance of each requirement;
  • demonstrating the competence and ability to translate into practice what is proposed in the guidelines in order to avoid compliance with the requirements becoming a bureaucratic and useless burden on procedures, in addition to increasing costs;
  • implementing procedures according to harmonized criteria in order to assure the risk of accreditation with flexible scope is prevented[3]; and
  • performing of audits by assessors with high competence in the laboratory field where the tests in accreditation are involved, as well as in the implementation of quality management systems in the clinical laboratory.

A quality management system based only on management requirements guarantees a controlled system in which the efficacy is related to the objectives of the organization. The ISO 15189 accreditation requires compliance with stringent technical and professional requirements, in addition to management requirements. This peculiarity of ISO 15189 is the fundamental aspect that has a strong impact on patient safety. The assurance of medical laboratories' competence, in compliance with the ISO 15189 requirements, depends on the level of laboratory staff competence but, also, on the competence of the assessors during the audit. The assessors play a key role in the release of accreditation. The evaluation of suitable interpretation of a morphologic pattern and the congruity of the interpretation between different operators, for example, can be evaluated only by assessors with high competence in that specific area. Each laboratory activity has to be based on consensus criteria and harmonized procedures complying with technical requirements structured according to management requirements, and they have to be managed by staff with recognized qualifications and assessed by assessors with appropriate competence. Only if this aspect is adequately understood and stressed in the implementation of accreditation can the introduction of ISO 15189 translate into effectiveness for higher quality and patient safety.

ISO 15189 accreditation

The need to comply with quality requirements approved by recognized international bodies was born about 20 years ago. Medical laboratories around the world, in order to satisfy this need, used the available standards, and many laboratories were accredited in compliance with EN 45000, and later ISO 17025, national standards issued by professional bodies (CCKL, CPA, etc.), and — especially in Italy — ISO 9001.[4][5] The limited value and appropriateness of these norms for medical laboratories promoted the development of a specific standard and, although the first draft was issued in 1997, only in 2003 was the first revision of the standard finally released. The standard was created based on the management requirements proposed in ISO 9001, as well as the technical requirements of ISO 17025 and specific professional requirements proposed by the European Communities Confederation of Clinical Chemistry (EC4).[6] This standard takes into account all the needs of medical laboratories, namely all the steps of the entire testing process, starting from the appropriate test request to the right notification of laboratory reports and the role of further clinical advice provided by laboratory professionals. It focuses attention on both the items of the intra-analytical phase (e.g., verification and validation of examination procedures, measurement uncertainty, metrological aspects, etc.), and on the pre- and post-analytical phases (peculiar features of medical laboratories in comparison to testing laboratories). However, its limited adoption, particularly in some countries, has been affected by the request to accredit each single test (fixed scope), as typically requested by the ISO 17025 accreditation process. Only in 2008 was an accreditation process with a more flexible scope approved by the EA, and medical laboratories have started with ISO 15189 accreditation at an international level.[7] Moreover, the identification of a unique national accreditation body has made clear which entity has to manage the accreditation of medical laboratories, promoting its diffusion.[8]

Harmonization needs

The introduction of flexible scopes for ISO 15189 accreditation has called for a definition of the scope of accreditation on the basis of description of coherent groups, defined by the measurand (test), medical field (e.g., clinical chemistry, haematology, etc.), measurand type (e.g., enzymes, biomarkers, hormones, etc.), analytical principles (e.g., direct potentiometry), and sample type (e.g., plasma, serum, etc.). All tests are part of a coherent group of associated tests, and the accreditation recognizes the competence in reference to the features of each group. In the period between audits, the laboratory manages the list of accredited tests included in a group, and the innovation of accredited tests is possible without asking for scope extension or adding other tests when they achieve compliance with the requirements. The rationale of the flexible scope is the release of accreditation for all tests that can be included in a group that has been accredited (same medical field, same test typology, same analytical principle, same sample type and belong to the same medical area) and are compliant with the requirements.[3]

The correct definition of each group and the tests to be included in the group are important for the appropriate management of flexible scopes and to guarantee the assessment of competences during the audit. The accreditation bodies, at the European level, have defined the groups within which the tests should be allocated. However, there is no harmonization in the definition of these groups (formulation too non-specific or too specific in relation to medical field, test typology, and analytical principle), and the same test can be included in a different group, depending on its country.

The spread of ISO 15189 accreditation has highlighted the need for harmonization of the list of groups in which tests have to be included. The use of the same list assures a clear understanding of the tests under accreditation for the scientific community from different countries and for patients, and allows distinguishing between laboratories with a different quality level of service. Similarly, concerning the checklists used by assessors during the audits, they should be standardized in order to guarantee a congruent evaluation among different countries.

There is another point to highlight concerning the accreditation with fixed or flexible scopes. In fact, it is possible to require accreditation with flexible scope only for the tests under control with inter-laboratory comparison, such as the external quality assessment (EQA)/proficiency testing (PT) program. However, unfortunately, for rare tests or innovative tests, an EQA/PT program should be unavailable. ISO 15189 requires the implementation of alternative approaches to establish the acceptability of EP, when EQA/PT are unavailable, but it does not report the approved approaches and if those tests can be included in the flexible scope. The identification of consensus criteria about this matter for the management of these tests is important in order to stimulate accreditation, with flexible scope for the entire service.

Pragmatic approach in the application of requirements

The scientific community promotes accreditation with flexible scope for the complete service, and it is therefore important to define criteria and operative instructions that cover the complete typology of tests. Experience in the field has highlighted some difficulties in applying approved guidelines and recommendations for all tests included in the service because of the different features and test purposes. Moreover, the guidelines and recommendations often do not take into account the costs and the workload needed for their implementation and, therefore, they may represent a set of procedures affected by the level of complexity and not easy to be performed. A pragmatic approach, inline with the approved recommendations and guidelines and using data already available in the laboratory, is needed in order to satisfy ISO 15189 requirements, assuring the reliability of results and promoting the introduction of the accreditation process in medical laboratories, all while balancing technological possibilities, risk, and personnel and time constraints.

An example concerns the procedures for the estimation of measurement uncertainty (MU), the verification of EP and quality indicators (QIs) management.

Measurement uncertainty

ISO 15189 does not specify how to estimate the MU, and several documents available in the literature propose different theoretical approaches for MU estimation (9–13).[9][10][11][12][13] However, in most cases a rigorous approach cannot be applied, and laboratories must attempt to identify a procedure that makes a reasonable estimation and does not create a wrong "impression" of the uncertainty. Reasonable estimation must be based on the knowledge of performance of the method and on the test purpose.

Some points in discussion concern: the components that have to be included in calculating MU (the bias, as an estimate of systematic error and imprecision, as an estimate of random error); the need to estimate more than one value of MU in relation to the concentration levels; and the criterion to be used to validate the MU. The correct answer to all points in the discussion requires the identification of a pragmatic approach that could stimulate the implementation in different laboratories, collect and compare these experiences, and formulate a feasible guideline complying with requirements but, also, with the organizational context.[14] For example, on the basis of the test purpose and considering different models for calculating MU available in literature[15][16][17], the bias could not be relevant when the interpretation of the test is made in comparison with the previous result of the same patient. Differently, when the result is interpreted in comparison with a clinical decision level that does not take into account the different diagnostic system used, the inclusion of the bias in the MU formula is important.[14]

Verification of examination procedures

ISO 15189:2012 (5.5.1.2) states that "the laboratory shall confirm, through obtaining objective evidence (in the form of performance characteristics) that the performance claims for the examination procedure have been met. The performance claims for the examination procedure confirmed during the verification process shall be those relevant to the intended use of the examination results."[1]

The verification of EP is therefore required for those validated by manufacturers according to the In Vitro Diagnostic (IVD) Medical Device Directive 98/79/EC.[18] The final aim is to guarantee that the EP validated by a manufacturer, when implemented in a specific laboratory, at least achieves the performances claimed by the manufacturer. The verification of all performance characteristics of EP (e.g., measurement trueness, measurement accuracy, measurement precision, measurement uncertainty, analytical specificity, analytical sensitivity, detection limit and quantitation limit, measuring interval, diagnostic specificity and diagnostic sensitivity), for all tests provided by a laboratory, requires additional work and increased costs.[19][20]

A pragmatic approach reported in literature is based on the awareness that when a laboratory undertakes the accreditation process, it keeps under control their results using different quality tools (e.g., internal quality control, external quality assessment scheme) for a long time.[21] Therefore, two operative flow charts can be identified: one to be applied just to the EP in use (for example, at least for two years) and another for newly introduced EP. Moreover, as ISO 15189 does not specify what performance characteristics have to be verified and how to do this, they can be chosen on the basis of the intended use of the EP. The verification at least of the trueness and precision using CQI and EQA data (for EP used in a laboratory for at least two years making the theory applicable) satisfies the ISO 15189 requirement.

Differently, the approach for newly introduced EP shall be based on more stringent quality requirements. As there are many manufacturers selling IVD products without declaring all the analytical performances, it is important, from now on, that in the purchasing procedures a laboratory requires the declaration of all analytical performances and metrological traceability of EP. The new introduction of EP has to be provided with accurate information by the manufacturer, and the laboratory has to achieve the performances claimed by the manufacturer by a more rigorous verification concerning the number of performance characteristics verified and the procedures used to do it. An open issue concerns what criteria have to be adopted when the manufacturer’s performances are not achieved. The comparison of obtained data with the goals based on the hierarchical structure established in the Milan Conference on Performance Specifications and test purpose can be considered a suitable criterion to be applied.[22]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "ISO 15189:2012 Medical laboratories -- Requirements for quality and competence". International Organization for Standardization. August 2014. https://www.iso.org/standard/56115.html. 
  2. Blebani, M.; Sciacovelli, L.; Chiozza, M.L.; Panteghini, M. (2015). "Once upon a time: A tale of ISO 15189 accreditation". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 53 (8): 1127–9. doi:10.1515/cclm-2015-0355. PMID 25992514. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 Thelen, M.H.; Vanstapel, F.J.; Kroupis, C. et al. (2015). "Flexible scope for ISO 15189 accreditation: a guidance prepared by the European Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (EFLM) Working Group Accreditation and ISO/CEN standards (WG-A/ISO)". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 53 (8): 1173–80. doi:10.1515/cclm-2015-0257. PMID 26055950. 
  4. "ISO/IEC 17025:2005 General requirements for the competence of testing and calibration laboratories". International Organization for Standardization. October 2005. https://www.iso.org/standard/39883.html. 
  5. "ISO 9001:2008 Quality management systems -- Requirements". International Organization for Standardization. July 2009. https://www.iso.org/standard/46486.html. 
  6. Jansen, R.T.; Blaton, V.; Burnett, D. et al. (1997). "Essential criteria for quality systems in medical laboratories". European Journal of Clinical Chemistry and Clinical Biochemistry 35 (2): 121–2. PMID 9056756. 
  7. European Accreditation (July 2008). "EA Requirements for the Accreditation of Flexible Scopes EA-2/15 M: 2008" (PDF). http://www.european-accreditation.org/publication/ea-2-15-m. 
  8. European Union (13 August 2008). "Regulation (EC) No 765/2008 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 9 July 2008 setting out the requirements for accreditation and market surveillance relating to the marketing of products and repealing Regulation (EEC) No 339/93". Official Journal of the European Union. http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=celex:32008R0765. 
  9. Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (2008). "Evaluation of measurement data – Guide to the expression of uncertainty in measurement". https://www.bipm.org/en/publications/guides/gum.html. Retrieved September 2016. 
  10. Matar, G.; Poggi, B.; Meley, R. et al. (2015). "Uncertainty in measurement for 43 biochemistry, immunoassay, and hemostasis routine analytes evaluated by a method using only external quality assessment data". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 53 (11): 1725–36. doi:10.1515/cclm-2014-0942. PMID 25811667. 
  11. Magnusson, B.; Näykk, T.; Hovind, H.; Mikael, K. (October 2012). "Handbook for calculation of measurement uncertainty in environmental laboratories (NT TR 537 - Edition 3.1)". http://www.nordtest.info/index.php/technical-reports/item/handbook-for-calculation-of-measurement-uncertainty-in-environmental-laboratories-nt-tr-537-edition-3.html. Retrieved September 2016. 
  12. Hässelbarth, W. (August 2006). "Guide to the Evaluation of Measurement Uncertainty for Quantitative Test Results" (PDF). EUROLAB. http://www.eurolab.org/documents/EL_11_01_06_387%20Technical%20report%20-%20Guide%20Measurement%20uncertainty.pdf. 
  13. Ellison, S.L.R.; Williams, A., ed. (2012). Eurachem/CITAC Guide: Quantifying Uncertainty in Analytical Measurement. Eurachem. ISBN 9780948926303. 
  14. 14.0 14.1 Padoan, A.; Antonelli, G.; Aita, A. et al. (2017). "An approach for estimating measurement uncertainty in medical laboratories using data from long-term quality control and external quality assessment schemes". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 55 (11): 1696-1701. doi:10.1515/cclm-2016-0896. PMID 28245184. 
  15. Dallas Jones, G.R. (2016). "Measurement uncertainty for clinical laboratories - A revision of the concept". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 54 (8): 1303-7. doi:10.1515/cclm-2016-0311. PMID 27176746. 
  16. Farrance, I.; Badrick, T.; Sikaris, K.A. (2016). "Uncertainty in measurement and total error - are they so incompatible?". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 54 (8): 1309-11. doi:10.1515/cclm-2016-0314. PMID 27227711. 
  17. Tate, J.R.; Plebani, M. (2016). "Measurement uncertainty - A revised understanding of its calculation and use". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 54 (8): 1277–9. doi:10.1515/cclm-2016-0327. PMID 27197135. 
  18. European Union (12 July 1998). "IDirective 98/79/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 October 1998 on in vitro diagnostic medical devices". Official Journal of the European Union. http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=uriserv:OJ.L_.1998.331.01.0001.01.ENG. 
  19. Theodorsson, E. (2016). "Quality Assurance in Clinical Chemistry: A Touch of Statistics and A Lot of Common Sense". Journal of Medical Biochemistry 35 (2): 103–112. doi:10.1515/jomb-2016-0012. PMC PMC5346785. PMID 28356868. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5346785. 
  20. Braga, F.; Infusino, I.; Panteghini, M. (2015). "Role and Responsibilities of Laboratory Medicine Specialists in the Verification OF Metrological Traceability of in vitro Medical Diagnostics". Journal of Medical Biochemistry 34 (3): 282–287. doi:10.1515/jomb-2015-0004. PMC PMC4922343. PMID 28356838. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4922343. 
  21. Antonelli, G.; Padoan, A.; Aita, A. (2017). "Verification of examination procedures in clinical laboratory for imprecision, trueness and diagnostic accuracy according to ISO 15189:2012: A pragmatic approach". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 55 (10): 1501-1508. doi:10.1515/cclm-2016-0894. PMID 28222014. 
  22. Sandberg, S.; Fraser, C.G.; Horvath, A.R. et al. (2015). "Defining analytical performance specifications: Consensus Statement from the 1st Strategic Conference of the European Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine". Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine 53 (6): 833–5. doi:10.1515/cclm-2015-0067. PMID 25719329. 

Notes

This presentation is faithful to the original, with only a few minor changes to presentation, including the addition of PMCID and DOI when they were missing from the original reference. Grammar and spelling were updated for readability and should not constitute "sufficient new creativity to be copyrightable"; no other modifications were made in accordance with the "no derivatives" portion of the distribution license.