Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes. / Wiwe, Elias Frost; Kofoed, Isabella Katarina; Dufréchou, Muriel Julie Falk; Philipsen, Jens Peter; Lemvig, Birthe; Rasmussen, Katrine Laura; Smith, Julie; Hillig, Thore.

In: International Journal of Laboratory Hematology, Vol. 46, No. 2, 2024, p. 312-321.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wiwe, EF, Kofoed, IK, Dufréchou, MJF, Philipsen, JP, Lemvig, B, Rasmussen, KL, Smith, J & Hillig, T 2024, 'Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes', International Journal of Laboratory Hematology, vol. 46, no. 2, pp. 312-321. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijlh.14204

APA

Wiwe, E. F., Kofoed, I. K., Dufréchou, M. J. F., Philipsen, J. P., Lemvig, B., Rasmussen, K. L., Smith, J., & Hillig, T. (2024). Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes. International Journal of Laboratory Hematology, 46(2), 312-321. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijlh.14204

Vancouver

Wiwe EF, Kofoed IK, Dufréchou MJF, Philipsen JP, Lemvig B, Rasmussen KL et al. Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes. International Journal of Laboratory Hematology. 2024;46(2):312-321. https://doi.org/10.1111/ijlh.14204

Author

Wiwe, Elias Frost ; Kofoed, Isabella Katarina ; Dufréchou, Muriel Julie Falk ; Philipsen, Jens Peter ; Lemvig, Birthe ; Rasmussen, Katrine Laura ; Smith, Julie ; Hillig, Thore. / Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes. In: International Journal of Laboratory Hematology. 2024 ; Vol. 46, No. 2. pp. 312-321.

Bibtex

@article{038f3f82498a469a96640a2030e494df,
title = "Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes",
abstract = "Introduction: Immature granulocyte percentage (IG%) is an important biomarker for infection control. We observed spurious cases where the IG% was dramatically underestimated on the automated Sysmex XN-series hehmatology analyzer compared with manual differential. These cases were associated with high values of “Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity” (NEUT-RI), which should reflect the metabolic activity of the neutrophils. Methods: We conducted a three-stage study to evaluate whether NEUT-RI could be utilized to screen for misclassified IG% results defined as the manual differential estimating a 10 percentage points higher IG% compared with the automated Sysmex differential. First, 124 patient samples were selected for 800-cell manual smear analysis based on their NEUT-RI values and compared with the automatic Sysmex IG% results. Next, 11 098 routine 110-cell manual smear analyses were compared with the corresponding Sysmex IG% results. Finally, during a 19-day period 160 additional patient samples underwent smear based on NEUT-RI values ≥56 fluorescence intensity (FI) to screen for misclassified results beyond our current smear practice. Results: NEUT-RI ≥56 predicted IG% misclassification with 91% sensitivity and 88% specificity, but primarily when the internal Sysmex flag “Abnormal WBC Scattergram” was present. 90.1% of misclassified results were identified by this flag. Beyond our existing smear rules including this flag, NEUT-RI ≥56 FI had a positive predictive value below 1%. Conclusion: Both NEUT-RI and the internal Sysmex flag “Abnormal WBC Scattergram” work well to identify cases of IG% misclassification. However, in our setting NEUT-RI ≥56 FI had no meaningful additional predictive capacity to identify misclassifications beyond our current smear rules.",
keywords = "differential leukocyte count, hematologic tests, neutrophils, patient safety, quality assurance",
author = "Wiwe, {Elias Frost} and Kofoed, {Isabella Katarina} and Dufr{\'e}chou, {Muriel Julie Falk} and Philipsen, {Jens Peter} and Birthe Lemvig and Rasmussen, {Katrine Laura} and Julie Smith and Thore Hillig",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1111/ijlh.14204",
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "312--321",
journal = "Clinical and Laboratory Haematology",
issn = "1751-5521",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity and misclassification of immature granulocytes

AU - Wiwe, Elias Frost

AU - Kofoed, Isabella Katarina

AU - Dufréchou, Muriel Julie Falk

AU - Philipsen, Jens Peter

AU - Lemvig, Birthe

AU - Rasmussen, Katrine Laura

AU - Smith, Julie

AU - Hillig, Thore

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Introduction: Immature granulocyte percentage (IG%) is an important biomarker for infection control. We observed spurious cases where the IG% was dramatically underestimated on the automated Sysmex XN-series hehmatology analyzer compared with manual differential. These cases were associated with high values of “Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity” (NEUT-RI), which should reflect the metabolic activity of the neutrophils. Methods: We conducted a three-stage study to evaluate whether NEUT-RI could be utilized to screen for misclassified IG% results defined as the manual differential estimating a 10 percentage points higher IG% compared with the automated Sysmex differential. First, 124 patient samples were selected for 800-cell manual smear analysis based on their NEUT-RI values and compared with the automatic Sysmex IG% results. Next, 11 098 routine 110-cell manual smear analyses were compared with the corresponding Sysmex IG% results. Finally, during a 19-day period 160 additional patient samples underwent smear based on NEUT-RI values ≥56 fluorescence intensity (FI) to screen for misclassified results beyond our current smear practice. Results: NEUT-RI ≥56 predicted IG% misclassification with 91% sensitivity and 88% specificity, but primarily when the internal Sysmex flag “Abnormal WBC Scattergram” was present. 90.1% of misclassified results were identified by this flag. Beyond our existing smear rules including this flag, NEUT-RI ≥56 FI had a positive predictive value below 1%. Conclusion: Both NEUT-RI and the internal Sysmex flag “Abnormal WBC Scattergram” work well to identify cases of IG% misclassification. However, in our setting NEUT-RI ≥56 FI had no meaningful additional predictive capacity to identify misclassifications beyond our current smear rules.

AB - Introduction: Immature granulocyte percentage (IG%) is an important biomarker for infection control. We observed spurious cases where the IG% was dramatically underestimated on the automated Sysmex XN-series hehmatology analyzer compared with manual differential. These cases were associated with high values of “Neutrophil Reactivity Intensity” (NEUT-RI), which should reflect the metabolic activity of the neutrophils. Methods: We conducted a three-stage study to evaluate whether NEUT-RI could be utilized to screen for misclassified IG% results defined as the manual differential estimating a 10 percentage points higher IG% compared with the automated Sysmex differential. First, 124 patient samples were selected for 800-cell manual smear analysis based on their NEUT-RI values and compared with the automatic Sysmex IG% results. Next, 11 098 routine 110-cell manual smear analyses were compared with the corresponding Sysmex IG% results. Finally, during a 19-day period 160 additional patient samples underwent smear based on NEUT-RI values ≥56 fluorescence intensity (FI) to screen for misclassified results beyond our current smear practice. Results: NEUT-RI ≥56 predicted IG% misclassification with 91% sensitivity and 88% specificity, but primarily when the internal Sysmex flag “Abnormal WBC Scattergram” was present. 90.1% of misclassified results were identified by this flag. Beyond our existing smear rules including this flag, NEUT-RI ≥56 FI had a positive predictive value below 1%. Conclusion: Both NEUT-RI and the internal Sysmex flag “Abnormal WBC Scattergram” work well to identify cases of IG% misclassification. However, in our setting NEUT-RI ≥56 FI had no meaningful additional predictive capacity to identify misclassifications beyond our current smear rules.

KW - differential leukocyte count

KW - hematologic tests

KW - neutrophils

KW - patient safety

KW - quality assurance

U2 - 10.1111/ijlh.14204

DO - 10.1111/ijlh.14204

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37985128

AN - SCOPUS:85177446017

VL - 46

SP - 312

EP - 321

JO - Clinical and Laboratory Haematology

JF - Clinical and Laboratory Haematology

SN - 1751-5521

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 387254891