Objectives: This quality improvement study, conducted at the Kansas City Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri, examined the change in patient reporting after transitioning from manual to CellaVision software-guided differentials and slide reviews. The primary focus was blasts and schistocytes, given their clinical significance.
Methods: Three months of manual and CellaVision patient data were examined between May 2022 and February 2023. Blast and schistocyte patients were standardized to the total specimens performed and compared using 2-sample proportion testing. Other red blood cell (RBC) morphologies were also compared using this statistical analysis.
Results: Blast and schistocyte reporting after technologist review statistically increased after implementing the CellaVision software. This finding was most prevalent for low-percentage blasts. In addition, both morphologies experienced varying degrees of false-positive reporting, with 33% for low-percentage blasts and 91.7% for schistocytes. Other RBC morphologies displayed different levels of change, which could be clinically significant.
Conclusions: The CellaVision software's increased sensitivity to blasts and schistocytes may benefit patient care, especially those with hematologic disorders. The software's high false-positive rate can be reduced by implementing quality metrics that prioritize clinically significant cells. This can be accomplished by implementing a CellaVision Champion to monitor reporting changes, perform patient lookbacks through the software, and provide technologist education. In addition, adopting a more stringent grading scale for schistocytes could also improve the high false-positive rate. Overall, CellaVision provides the ability to enhance hematology quality metrics by providing access to how patient cells are categorized and offering prompt education.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/aqae146 | DOI Listing |
Kidney360
January 2025
Division of Nephrology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA.
Background: 'Life Years from Transplant' (LYFT) is a measure of the predicted difference between the expected lifespan with and without a kidney transplant. The metric was originally proposed in 1999; since then, demographics of the kidney transplant candidate population have materially changed.
Methods: Using contemporary SRTR data, we propose more sophisticated methods for estimating LYFT with a focus on older kidney transplant candidates, a growing sector of the current candidate pool.
Diabetes Care
February 2025
Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development, Duke University, Durham, NC.
Blood Adv
January 2025
University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, Massachusetts, United States.
Although lymphoma and myeloma confer physical and psychological burden, data are limited regarding anxiety and depression symptoms in affected patients. We conducted a survey between 07/2021 and 09/2022 to characterize anxiety and depression in a cohort of adult patients, within six months of a lymphoma or myeloma diagnosis. Clinically significant anxiety and depression symptoms were defined as scores ≥8 on the corresponding subscales of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHealth Aff (Millwood)
January 2025
Eric Horvitz, Microsoft, Redmond, Washington.
The field of artificial intelligence (AI) has entered a new cycle of intense opportunity, fueled by advances in deep learning, including generative AI. Applications of recent advances affect many aspects of everyday life, yet nowhere is it more important to use this technology safely, effectively, and equitably than in health and health care. Here, as part of the National Academy of Medicine's Vital Directions for Health and Health Care: Priorities for 2025 initiative, which is designed to provide guidance on pressing health care issues for the incoming presidential administration, we describe the steps needed to achieve these goals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJAMA Netw Open
January 2025
Translational Research Center for TBI and Stress Disorders, Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System, Boston, Massachusetts.
Importance: There has been a great deal of interest in mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and their association with one another, yet their interaction and subsequent associations with long-term outcomes remain poorly understood.
Objective: To compare the long-term outcomes of mTBI that occurred in the context of psychological trauma (peritraumatic context) with mTBI that did not (nonperitraumatic context).
Design, Setting, And Participants: This cohort study of post-9/11 US veterans used data from the Translational Research Center for Traumatic Brain Injury and Stress Disorders (TRACTS) study at the Veterans Affairs Boston Healthcare System, which began in 2009; the current study utilized data from baseline TRACTS visits conducted between 2009 and 2024.
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