Title: How to Successfully Influence Test Utilization
1How to Successfully Influence Test Utilization
Improve Laboratory Efficiency
Fred V. Plapp, Cynthia Essmyer, Anne Byrd
Marjorie Zucker Saint Lukes Health System Kansas
City
2Why Be Concerned About Excessive Testing?
- Increased laboratory costs
- Once operational efficiencies are maximized,
reducing unnecessary testing is the only way to
significantly reduce costs - Payer pressure
- Continued squeeze on reimbursement
- Required documentation of utilization
3Why Be Concerned About Test Utilization?
- Increased potential for direct indirect harm
- Increased number of false weak positives
- Follow-up increases cost, worry, discomfort, risk
- Confirmatory tests
- Specialist referrals
- Invasive procedures
- Unnecessary postponement of procedure
- Attention diverted from primary problem
4Chance of One Test Being Abnormal
5Strategies for Changing Physician Ordering
Behavior
- Reviewed 49 articles between 1966 1998
- JAMA 19982802020
- Strategies that do not work by themselves
- Physician consensus building
- Test guideline dissemination
- Traditional education
- Utilization audits
- Informing physicians of lab charges
6Strategies for Changing Physician Ordering
Behavior
- Strategies that do work
- Administrative interventions
- Environmental interventions
- Combinations with other strategies
7Lundbergs PrinciplesJAMA 19982802036
- Know the right thing to do
- Confer w/ respected physician leaders
- Implement changes administratively
- Educate through writing conferences
- Weather the storm
- Remain open to communication
- Enjoy the success of more effective service
8Examples of Environmental Interventions
- Test requisition redesign
- Preferred tests cascades emphasized
- Outmoded tests less obvious or omitted
- Large panels restricted
- Optimized testing reporting
- Rapid turnaround times
- Minimal number of laboratory errors
- Immediate easy access to test results
- Merged out inpatient test results
9Examples of Administrative Interventions
- Administrative policy changes
- Pathologist approval for special tests
- Pathologist approval of send out tests
- Test intervals, frequencies reflex policy
- Financial feedback
- Review of CPT codes denied payment
- Decision support systems
10Examples of Educational Interventions
- Clinical Laboratory Letter
- Test recommendations algorithms
- Clinical pathways
- Practice guidelines w/ standardized testing
- Timely pathology consults
- Physician feedback
- Test utilization by service or peer group
11Clinical Laboratory LetterBest Educational Tool
12Analyzing the Problem
- High test volume diverse test menu
- 2 million tests performed per year
- gt300 different tests offered
- No single project would be effective
- Multi-pronged long term strategy was required
13Arriving at a Solution
- Pathologists staff continuously monitor testing
trends within their areas of expertise - Targeted tests with following characteristics
- High volume
- Expensive
- Difficult to perform
- Questionable medical benefit
- Unusual number of abnormal results
14Action Plan
- Lab collaborated with
- Hospital departments patient care committees
- Nursing and medical staffs
- Pathologists discussed proposals with
- Key physicians
- Entire medical departments
- Hospital Performance Improvement committee
- Clinical Laboratory Letter
- Published test utilization data algorithms
15Types of Projects Undertaken
- Algorithms Reflex Testing
- Send Out Tests
- In-sourcing Tests
- Transfusion
- Error Rate
- Excessive Tests
- Obsolete Tests
- Clinical Pathways
- Reference Ranges
- Wastage
- Turnaround Time
16Vancomycin MonitoringExample of Excess Testing
- Clinical pharmacologists noted too many drug
levels ordered in 1994 - Peak trough levels ordered together
- Little scientific evidence supporting peak
- Lab Pharmacy educated medical staff
- Presented at medical staff meetings
- Published data in Clinical Laboratory Letter
- Deleted peak from computer order screens
17Vancomycin Orders
Year Tests Payer Cost Savings
1993 2127 95,524
1995 905 40,644 54,880
1997 1113 50,085 45,439
18Cardiac Marker ProfileExample of Excess Testing
- Cardiac panel from 1998 to 2000
- Total CK, MB TnI
- 0, 6 12 hours
19Cardiac Marker ProfileExample of Excess Testing
- ACC AHA guideline revision in 2000
- Panel ? to MB TnI at 0, 3, 6 h
- Eliminated gt23,000 CK per year
- 3450/y decrease in reagent costs
- 805,000/y decrease in payer charges
- Faster TAT 1 vs 2 analyzers
- Time to discontinue MB?
20WBC Differential CountsExample of Excess Testing
- Manual diff rate was 40 in 1999
- Installed Coulter Gen-S in 2000
- Continually re-examined reflex criteria
- Eliminated Immature Gran band 1 flag
- Eliminated diff if WBC lt0.8
- No flags on high RBC, Hb, Hct, MCV, RDW
- Set neutrophil flag to 12.0 90
21Manual WBC Diff Rate
22WBC Differential CountsSLH Outcomes
- Avoid 15,000 manual diffs per year
- CAP average time 11 minutes/slide
- Save 2750 hours of labor per year
- gt1 FTE
- Expect rate to ?? further in 2004
- New analyzer
- Eliminate band counts
23Rapid Bacterial Antigen TestsExample of an
Obsolete Test
- Introduced in 1980s for Dx of bacterial
meningitis - H flu
- N meningitidis
- E coli
- S pneumo
- GBS
24Rapid Bacterial Antigen TestsExample of an
Obsolete Test
- Clinical utility questioned today
- Not sensitive enough to rule out bacterial origin
- Not specific enough to direct antibiotic therapy
- Improved empiric antibiotic Rx available
25Rapid Bacterial Antigen TestsSLH Outcome
- Pathologist reviewed 22 cases over 3 months
- 50 ordered inappropriately
- Reviewed guidelines w/ ED physicians
- Published in Clinical Laboratory Letter
- Monitored utilization for 1y after guidelines
- Total number of orders decreased 75
- Discontinued in Oct 2001
26Bleeding TimeExample of an Obsolete Test
- Poor perioperative screening test
- Poor diagnostic test
- Poor clinical reproducibility
- Technical patient factors
- Discontinuation not associated w/ adverse outcome
- Clin Chem 2001471204-11
27Evaluating Bleeding Risk
28Bleeding TimeSLH Outcomes
- BT discontinued June 2003
- Eliminated 425 manual tests per year
- Time savings of 212 hours per year
- Labor savings of 31,875 per year
- Payer charges decreased 108,375
29Band Neutrophil CountExample of an Obsolete Test
- Previously considered mainstay in lab diagnosis
of bacterial infection - Recently clinical utility questioned
- Subjective band ID criteria
- Imprecision sampling errors
- Accurate 5 part automated diff
- ANC better predictor of infection
30Confidence Limits100 Cell Manual Diff Count
Bands Confidence Limits
5 1 12
10 4 18
15 8 24
20 12 - 30
31Labs That Are Band-less
- Stanford
- Cleveland Clinic
- MD Anderson
- Vanderbilt
- UCSF
- SLH
- 3500 counts/year
- 640 hours of labor
32Blood Bank SerologyExamples of Obsolete Tests
- Recipient testing policies adopted
- Immediate spin crossmatch
- Routine use of anti-IgG
- Elutions on DAT only if Tx w/in 3 mo
- Donor testing
- Anti-A,B to confirm group O units
- Rh type confirmed only on Rh? units
33Blood Bank SerologyExamples of Obsolete Tests
- Recipient tests eliminated
- Anti-A,B testing on recipients
- Autocontrol
- Weak D testing including moms
- Reading Ab screen after immediate spin
- Antigen typing for insignificant Ab
34Blood Bank SerologyExamples of Obsolete Tests
- Cord blood test policies
- ABO Rh typing only if mom is Group O or
Rh negative - No elution if DAT
35Blood Bank SerologySLH Cost Savings
- gt1900 hours of labor per year
- gt23,100 tubes per year
- 90 vials of anti-D per year
- 48 vials of anti-A and B
- Numerous elutions
- Only performed 11 in 2003
36Clinical PathwaysExample of Practice Guidelines
- Nurses physicians wrote guidelines
- Pathologists reviewed lab tests
- Suggestions returned to authors
- Test utilization monitored before after
3770 Clinical PathwaysImpact on Test Utilization
Year Cases/Yr Tests/Cs Test/Yr
1992 8823 50.3 443,797
1996 9630 44.3 426,609
Diff 807 -6 -17,188
Diff 9 -12 -4
38Anti-nuclear AntibodyExample of Reference Range
Change
- Reported ANA gt140 as positive
- before 1995
- Referrals follow-up tests ordered
- lt5 positive if ANA lt1160
- Discussed with rheumatologists
- Changed cutoff to 1160 in June 95
- Started testing at 1160 dilution
39ANA Test Volumes
Test May-June 1995 May-June 1996
ANA QL 1455 1697
ANA QT 448 296
Positive 31 17
40Anti-nuclear AntibodyOutcomes
- Positive ANA rate decreased 14
- Follow-up testing eliminated
- Payer charges ? 99,925 per year
- Referrals diagnostic procedures avoided
- Eliminated gt500 manual tests per year
41Blood Culture ContaminationExample of Decreased
Wastage
- Contamination w/ skin flora causes
- Unnecessary antibiotic administration
- Additional cultures other lab tests
- Increased length of stay
- Increased hospital cost of 5000/case
- ASM goal is contamination rate lt3
- ED usually have higher rates
42Blood Culture ContaminationProcedure Change
- Chlorhexidine blood culture prep
- One step application
- Decreased drying time
- ED trial in August 2002
- Hospital-wide in May 2003
43Blood Culture Contamination SLH Quarterly Monitor
44Blood Culture ContaminationSLH Savings
- 9740 blood cultures per year
- Contaminants ? from 238 to 135
- 515,000 hospital cost savings per year
45Specimen in Lab PolicyExample of Decreased
Wastage
- Worked with Blood Conservation Team to reduce
iatrogenic blood loss - SIL Policy implemented
- Stored blood specimens for 2 weeks
- Publicized in Lab Letter Nursing publications
- Avoided redrawing patients for add on tests
46Specimen in Lab PolicySLH Outcomes
- 11,244 requests for tests on SIL
- 51,726 savings in labor supplies
- Avoided 11,244 venipunctures
- Conserved 71,428 mL of blood
- Equivalent to 140 units of RBCs
47CMV PCR QuantitationExample of Decreased Wastage
- Cobas Amplicor CMV QT - Oct 2001
- Initially performed on M,W,F schedule
- Not enough specimens to use complete kit
- Unused reagents had to be discarded
- Wastage cost 5000 per month
- Flexible schedule introduced Jan 2003
- Run whenever have 9 specimens
- Monitored wastage TAT
48CMV QT Reagent Wastage
49CMV QT Turnaround Time
50Urine CulturesExample of Improved TAT
- Literature recommended 24 hour incubation
- Discussed with Infectious Disease physicians
- Published in Laboratory Letter
- Procedure changed on Sep 1, 1995
- Repeated monitor in June 96 Sep 98
51Urine Culture Results _at_ 48 vs. 24 Hours
Results Sep 95 Jun 96 Sep 98
Pos 38 39 37
Neg 12 45 47
Contam 50 16 16
52Urine CultureSLH Benefits
- No change in true positive rate
- 6100 fewer contaminants per year
- Payer cost savings of 88,740 per year
- Fewer contaminants worked up
- Fewer repeat cultures submitted
- Faster turnaround time
- Antibiotic Rx optimized more quickly
- Lab workload ? by 120 plates per day
53Diarrhea Work-upExample of Optimizing Reflex
Testing
- Questionable value for inpatients
- Reviewed gt200 inpatient OP stool cultures
- No enteric pathogens detected
- Ordered for 3 consecutive days
- Payers billed 234,375 w/o pathogen
- 20 exams on inpatients admitted gt3d
54Diarrhea Work-upLab Policy Change
- New nosocomial diarrhea policy
- gt3 days after admission
- Substituted C. diff toxin for OP
- lt3 days after admission
- Substituted Giardia screen for OP
- Payer cost savings gt400,000/year
- Reagent labor savings of 11,592 per year
- Specimen held for 7 days
55Diarrhea Algorithm
561995 HCV AlgorithmExample of Optimizing Reflex
Testing
571995 HCV Algorithm Inefficiency Identified
- PCR if RIBA positive or indeterminate
- Most RIBA were Indeterminate
- 66 had RIBA PCR performed
- Shared data with GI ID physicians
- Changed algorithm in 1997
581997 HCV Algorithm
591997 HCV Algorithm
- Financial Impact
- PCR had better sensitivity specificity
- Fewer RIBA performed
- Based on 1997 test volumes
- Payer charges decreased 63,000
- Laboratory costs decreased 39,000
601997 HCV Algorithm Limitations
- PCR QT had limited dynamic range
- Not as sensitive as PCR QL
- 25 cases exceeded linearity
- TaqMan RT PCR conversion
- Much wider dynamic range
- Eliminated need for PCR QL
- Eliminated repeat testing
- 23,000 per year cost savings
612003 HCV Algorithm
62Thyroid TestingExample of Optimized Reflex
Testing
- 3 Lab Letters recommended cascade
- Feb 96, Apr 98 Feb 99
- Screen w/ TSH
- Follow-up w/ fT4
- 85 of patients have normal TSH
- No further testing required
63Thyroid Cascade
64Thyroid Cascade Adaptation
65Monoclonal GammopathiesExample of Optimized
Reflex Testing
- Physicians able order IFE w/o prior SPE
- Most patients did not have monoclonal
- IFE more expensive than SPE
- Established reflex testing
- Lab supply savings of 6000 per year
- Payer charges decreased 17,800 per year
66Lab Evaluation of Monoclonal Gammopathies
67Monoclonal GammopathiesSLH IFE Utilization
68Esoteric Send Out Requests
- Esoteric test expenses increasing
- HHV-6, FISH, NK cells, CF, HCV genotypes
- CLS pathologists review requests
- Consult with ordering physician
- In source if feasible
- Annual cost savings of 200,000/year
69Cystic FibrosisExample of In-sourcing a Test
- ACOG ACMG recommendation
- March 2001
- Offer screening to pregnant couples
- Sent to reference lab initially
- Roche CF Gold in November 2002
- 40,000 cost savings in 2003
70HCV GenotypingExample of In-sourcing a Test
- 6 HCV genotypes recognized
- Genotype determines therapy
- Type 1 requires 48 months
- Types 2 3 require 24 months
- Interferon Rx very expensive
71HCV GenotypingSLH Savings
- Sent to reference lab initially
- INNO-LiPa HCV II implemented in 2001
- 55,670 cost savings in 2002
72Open Heart Surgery Example of Transfusion Review
- OHS transfused one third of components
- Pathologist analyzed blood usage each year
- Surgeon specific usage
- Reviewed with CTS team
- Evaluated risk factors, meds,practice variations
- Published transfusion guidelines risks
- Presented to medical house staff
73Average Number of Units Transfused per OHS Case
74Benefits of Decreased Transfusion
- 1000 OHS cases performed each year
- 600,000 cost savings per year
- Transfusion reaction risks decreased
- Blood Bank workload decreased
- Nursing time for transfusion decreased
75POC Blood Glucose TestingPatient Identification
Errors
- Manual Patient ID entry
- 12,000 tests per month
- 9.7 average error rate
- 450 unidentified results per month
- PI project in December 2002
- Accu-Chek Inform RALS Plus
- Barcoded armbands
76Glucose Meter ID Errors
77Inpatient Tests per Discharge
78SLH Admitting Physician Satisfaction Survey
79Summary of the SLH Approach
- Target problems that are solvable
- Collect analyze data from your own lab
- Present the data to influential physicians
- These experts are the labs best advocates
- Communicate changes to medical staff
- Lab newsletter is a very effective educational
tool - Monitor impact of changes