Effectiveness of rapid prescreening and 10% rescreening in liquid-based papanicolaou testing

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Abstract

Although rapid prescreening (RPS) has been shown to be an effective quality control procedure for detecting false-negative conventional Papanicolaou (Pap) tests, RPS has not been widely implemented in the United States. In our laboratory, cytotechnologists performed RPS in 3,567 liquid-based Pap tests: 1,911 SurePath (BD Diagnostics-TriPath, Burlington, NC) preparations that were manually screened and 1,656 ThinPrep Pap tests (Hologic, Bedford, MA) that were imaged using the ThinPrep Imaging System (Hologic). We compared the sensitivity of RPS, 10% rescreening (R-10%), and routine screening (RS). In contrast with previously published findings, we found that RS + RPS did not improve screening sensitivity compared with RS + R-10%. These results support the following hypotheses: (1) Higher baseline RS sensitivity as a result of Pap test diagnoses standardization implemented for quality improvement purposes decreases the performance impact of RPS. (2) R-10% and RPS quality assurance methods detect diagnostic failures caused by different types of cognitive errors. © American Society for Clinical Pathology.

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APA

Currens, H. S., Nejkauf, K., Wagner, L., & Raab, S. S. (2012). Effectiveness of rapid prescreening and 10% rescreening in liquid-based papanicolaou testing. American Journal of Clinical Pathology, 137(1), 150–155. https://doi.org/10.1309/AJCP6LW4SYBTISOW

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