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Comparative Study
Statistical analysis of inappropriate results from current Hb screening methods for blood donors.
- Virge James, Keith F Jones, Elizabeth M Turner, and Robert J Sokol.
- National Blood Service, Trent Center, Sheffield, UK. virge.james@nbs.nhs.uk
- Transfusion. 2003 Mar 1;43(3):400-4.
BackgroundThe objective was to apply statistical analysis to the false passes and fails that occur with the primary and secondary Hb-screening methods used at blood-donor sessions.Study Design And MethodsVenous samples from 1513 potential donors who had undergone primary CuSO4 screening using capillary blood (Hb cut-offs: women, 125 g/L; men, 135 g/L) were tested at the session by a secondary method (HemoCue; cut-offs: women, 120 g/L; men, 130 g/L) and again at the base laboratory using another system (Beckman Coulter General S system), which generated the "true" Hb value.ResultsFalse-pass and -fail rates for women and men, respectively, were 11.2 and 6.3 percent (women) and 5.2 and 1.8 percent (men) for CuSO4; 1.9 and 3.7 percent (women) and 1.5 and 0.4 percent (men) for HemoCue; and 2.7 and 2.4 percent (women) and 1.8 and 0.2 percent (men) for a combined procedure that mimicked current practice of only testing CuSO4 fails by HemoCue.ConclusionCuSO4 Hb screening gives large numbers of false passes, particularly in women. Using venous samples, the majority correctly pass at the lower HemoCue cut-offs. The current dual-testing policy appears convenient for donor sessions, but because small percentages of false passes and fails represent large numbers of donors, every effort should be made to improve the accuracy of Hb screening.
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