All specimen-collection tubes should be labeled with the

Each tube used for blood collection is labeled by the manufacturer with important information. This information includes: tube volume in milliliters [mL], expiration date, lot number and, if applicable, the type of additive that is in the tube.

Tube volume: Each tube contains a vacuum that allows a specific amount of blood to enter the tube. In a tube that contains an anticoagulant, the amount of blood that is drawn into the tube will establish the correct blood to anticoagulant ratio. Tubes not filled to the correct volume [over-filled or under-filled] may cause inaccurate test results.

Expiration Date: An expiration date is stamped on all blood collection tubes, as shown in the image on the right. The tube manufacturer determines this date based on its studies of vacuum maintenance and anticoagulant effectiveness. The expiration date should be checked routinely; tubes that are past the expiration date should be discarded.

If a blood collection tube is used past its expiration date, the vacuum may not draw the amount of blood needed to fill the tube completely. Short-filled tubes may not be acceptable for testing and the specimen would have to be recollected. If the tube contains an anticoagulant, it may not work effectively [may not prevent the blood from clotting].

Lot Number: A lot number listed on the tube identifies a specific group of tubes that were manufactured at the same time. This information is important to know if a problem is identified with several collection tubes. If the defective tubes are all part of the same lot number, the manufacturer should be notified for replacement of the tubes.

Additive: Most blood collection tubes contain a type of additive or chemical that, when mixed with the blood, will yield a specimen acceptable for testing. The various types of additives that are contained in blood collection tubes are discussed on the following page.

Our December, 2017 Quick Question asked, "When is the correct time to label blood specimen tubes?" The question generated 124 votes, an exceptional total that illustrates the level of concern for this issue. The answers were:

  1. Prior to meeting the patient: 6 [5%]
  2. In the presence of the patient, before collecting the blood: 36 [29%]
  3. In the presence of the patient, after collecting the blood: 82 [66%]
  4. Just after dismissing the patient [0]

The results of this survey and comments will appear in an Annals of Blood editorial this spring.

Worldwide, all regulatory documents require that specimen tube be labeled in the patient's presence, and most require the patient to confirm the label before being dismissed. Those who selected answer 1 should examine their protocols and ensure they fall in line with the accrediting agencies' requirements. Although a few European providers require the tubes be labeled prior to collection, most, and all North American regulators require the label be affixed or written after collection while in the presence of the patient. Labeling prior to collection adds an unnecessary potential error in that labeled, unused tubes could find their way to a subsequent collection, resulting in a mislabeled specimen. George will notify our participants when the AOB article appears, and meanwhile, thank you for your participation.

Viewpoint

Introduction

Blood specimen identification errors continue to threaten patient safety. One study reviewed 4.29 million specimens collected over 24 months and found the frequency of mislabeled specimens, unlabeled specimens, and specimen-requisition mismatches to be 1.0%, 4.6%, and 6.3%, respectively, with mislabeling presenting the greatest danger [1]. Yet efforts are underway to influence national and international standards organizations to modify the sequence in which tubes are labeled [2]. This modification, which advocates for labeling prior to collection, is ill advised and risks the possibility of raising the frequency of mislabeled tubes, negatively impacting patient care.

Blood specimen collection error prevention authority

The Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute [CLSI]’s efforts to prevent mislabeling include [3]:

  • Requiring patients to state their full name and birth date, and to spell their first name and last name;
  • Requiring outpatients to show a form of identification when an ID band is not in use, typically a driver’s license or insurance card;
  • Labeling specimen tubes in the presence of the patient after the draw;
  • Visually comparing tube labels with the ID band or requiring the patient to confirm samples are properly labeled.

Historical precedent for post-collection labeling

For decades, the worldwide-standardized protocol for drawing diagnostic blood specimens has been to label tubes after they are filled, as specified by six consecutive CLSI standards: NCCLS-1991, NCCLS-1998, NCCLS-2003, CLSI-2007, CLSI-2010, and CLSI-2017 [4-8]. In 2010, the World Health Organization [WHO] confirmed the international consensus when it published WHO Guidelines on Drawing Blood: Best Practices in Phlebotomy [9]. In 2012 the CSA Group [formerly Canadian Standards Association] established a post-collection labeling policy for Canadian facilities [10]. Altogether eight committees, each comprised of a unique assemblage of subject matter experts, representing three international standards organizations, concluded that tubes must be labeled after they are filled.

The Fritsma Factor, Your Interactive Hemostasis Resource [//fritsmafactor.com/post/when-label-tubes-0] surveyed a worldwide sample of convenience December 1–31, 2017 asking, “When is the correct time to label blood specimen tubes?” Of 124 participants, 6 [5%] chose “prior to meeting the patient,” 36 [29%] chose “in the presence of the patient, before collecting the blood,” and 82 [66%] chose “in the presence of the patient, after collecting the blood.” The survey did not distinguish among locations.

Risks inherent in pre-collection labeling

Of concern to us is the potential for pre-labeled tubes to go unfilled due to a difficult draw, patient illness, syncope, patient refusal, or any additional reasons a draw is delayed or canceled. These common situations leave the collector with pre-labeled tubes that, if not discarded, could be mistakenly used on a subsequent patient. Experts assert that laboratory results drive 70% of physician medical decisions. No patient should risk having the accuracy of their test results compromised when the collector fails to discard pre-labeled, unfilled tubes. Further, pre-labeling impedes visual confirmation that the tube is filling and often obscures the manufacturer’s optimum fill indicator, leading to underfilled tubes and higher sample rejection rates. There is no evidence pre-collection labeling reduces labelling errors. Rather than adding a new opportunity for error into an already error-prone procedure, we strongly advocate for post-collection labeling.

Support for pre-collection labeling

Although their position has been misinterpreted as favoring pre-labeling, in its Best Practices guideline, WHO provides stepwise illustrations of adult venipuncture [11]. Step 20, the tube-labeling step, appears after disposal of the needle and supplies, therefore, after tubes are filled. Post-collection labeling is also the WHO’s protocol for pediatric and neonatal draws and arterial sampling.

A 2011 editorial [2] misrepresents four earlier publications, stating, “The common denominator of all these guidelines and recommendations is that primary blood tubes should be labeled…before venipuncture is performed.” However, 3 of the 4 citations do not make that recommendation and the fourth is a self-reference [12].

The Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare alone has established pre-collection labeling to be their standard procedure. No other government makes this a national protocol. In Germany and other European regions, pre-collection labeling is a matter of historical precedent rather than regulation [13]. CLSI, WHO, and CSA protocols prevail everywhere else.

The European Federation of Clinical Chemistry’s Laboratory Medicine Working Group on Preanalytical Phase and its supporters advocate for pre-labeling [14-17]. However, there are no studies that show pre-labeling leads to fewer sample identification errors. Without compelling evidence those errors would be prevented, we are not inclined to embrace an accommodation of this magnitude even with the introduction of pre-labeling automation.

Summary

Until provided with data that prove pre-labeling reduces errors, we assert the practice introduces an unnecessary error point that is a threat to patient safety. We further recommend that blood collection standards should not be influenced so much by historical protocol as for the need to provide reliable laboratory results.

Acknowledgments

Funding: None.

Provenance and Peer Review: This article was commissioned by the editorial office, Annals of Blood. The article did not undergo external peer review.

Conflicts of Interest: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form [available at //dx.doi.org/10.21037/aob.2018.02.06]. DJ Ernst: The Center for Phlebotomy Education is an authorized distributor of CLSI documents; GA Fritsma: The Fritsma Factor, Your Interactive Hemostasis Resource, sponsored by Precision BioLogic Inc., Halifax, Nova Scotia. The other author has no conflicts of interest to declare.

Ethical Statement: The authors are accountable for all aspects of the manuscript and ensure that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work are appropriately investigated and resolved.

Open Access Statement: This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 4.0 International License [CC BY-NC-ND 4.0], which permits the non-commercial replication and distribution of the article with the strict proviso that no changes or edits are made and the original work is properly cited [including links to both the formal publication through the relevant DOI and the license]. See: //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/.

References

  1. Wagar EA, Tamashiro L, Yasin B, et al. Patient safety in the clinical laboratory: a longitudinal analysis of specimen identification errors. Arch Pathol Lab Med 2006;130:1662-8. [PubMed]
  2. Lippi G, Sonntag O, Plebani M. Appropriate labelling of blood collection tubes: a step ahead towards patient’s safety. Clin Chem Lab Med 2011;49:1921-3. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  3. CLSI. Collection of Diagnostic Venous Blood Specimens---Approved Standard [GP41-A7]. Wayne: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2017.
  4. National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards. Procedures for the Collection of Diagnostic Blood Specimens by Venipuncture—Third Edition; Approved Standard, [H3-A3]. Villanova: NCCLS, 1991.
  5. National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards. Procedures for the Collection of Diagnostic Blood Specimens by Venipuncture —Fourth Edition; Approved Standard, [H3-A4]. Villanova: NCCLS, 1998.
  6. National Committee for Clinical Laboratory Standards. Procedures for the Collection of Diagnostic Blood Specimens by Venipuncture —Fifth Edition; Approved Standard, H3-A5. Wayne: NCCLS, 2003.
  7. CLSI. Procedures for the Collection of Diagnostic Blood Specimens by Venipuncture; Approved Standard—Sixth Edition. H3-A6. Wayne: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2007.
  8. CLSI. Accuracy in Patient and Sample Identification---Approved Guideline [GP33A]. Wayne: Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute, 2010.
  9. World Health Organization. WHO Guidelines on Drawing Blood: Best Practices in Phlebotomy. Geneva: WHO Press, 2010.
  10. CSA Group. Primary sample collection facilities and medical laboratories—patient safety and quality of care—requirements for collecting, transporting, and storing samples. Z316.7-12. Mississauga: CSA Group, 2012.
  11. van Dongen-Lases EC, Cornes MP, Grankvist K, et al. Patient identification and tube labelling—a call for harmonisation. Clin Chem Lab Med 2016;54:1141-5. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  12. Sciacovelli L, O’Kane M, Skaik YA, et al. Quality Indicators in Laboratory Medicine: from theory to practice. Preliminary data from the IFCC Working Group Project "Laboratory Errors and Patient Safety". Clin Chem Lab Med 2011;49:835-44. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  13. Guder WG, da Fonseca-Wollheim F, Heil W, et al. The Quality of Diagnostic Samples. Recommendations of the working group on preanalytical variables of the German Society for Clinical Chemistry and the German Society for Laboratory Medicine. Darmstadt: GIT, 2000.
  14. Lippi G, Caputo M, Banfi G, et al. Recommendations for collection of venous blood. Biochim Clin 2008;32:569-77.
  15. Lippi G, Plebani M. Blood tubes should be labeled before drawing blood. Ann Blood 2017;2:18. [Crossref]
  16. Lippi G, Mattiuzzi C, Bovo C, et al. Managing the patient identification crisis in healthcare and laboratory medicine. Clin Biochem 2017;50:562-7. [Crossref] [PubMed]
  17. Lippi G, Chiozza L, Mattiuzzi C, et al. Patient and sample identification. Out of the maze? J Med Biochem 2017;36:107-12. [Crossref] [PubMed]

doi: 10.21037/aob.2018.02.06
Cite this article as: Ernst DJ, Fritsma GA, McGlasson DL. Labeling tubes before collection threatens patient safety. Ann Blood 2018;3:16.

What should be included when labeling the specimen tube?

The label must contain the following legible information:.
Patient name..
Patient medical record number, with check digit..
Patient location..
Collection date and time..
Specimen type and/or source..
Test required [note any special handling required].
Ordering physician..

What should all specimens be labeled with?

To maintain patient safety standards, specimens must be properly labeled with the name of the patient, a numerical identifier that is unique to the patient [like DOB or SSN], collection date, and the source of the specimen, where applicable.

When Should specimen tubes be labeled?

A properly labeled sample is essential so that the results of the test match the patient. a] Label all tubes in the presence of the patient in the drawing area and only after the blood have been drawn. DO NOT defer until a later time.

How do you label a tube sample?

Affixing the label appropriately to the tube is crucial for properly identifying the specimen during the pre-analytical phase of processing..
DO place the label straight along the length of the tube, with the name at the top. ... .
DON'T leave little bumps in the label. ... .
DO use the correct size label..

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