CLSI PRE04 1st Edition PDF
This guideline includes criteria for assessing blood specimen quality and acceptability.
This guideline provides recommendations for appropriate handling, transport, processing, and storage of specimens used as whole blood, serum, or plasma for routine laboratory examinations. It is intended to cover the general principles of preserving and maintaining the in vivo characteristics of specimens so the laboratory can develop a discriminatory thought process for evaluating specimen integrity.
This guideline focuses on many of the variables related to the preexamination phase of the path of workflow that affect specimen quality. However, it does not include an in-depth discussion of collection considerations, such as proper patient preparation (eg, fasting status, time of collection, particularly for therapeutic drugs or measurands with diurnal variation), collection methods (eg, collecting specimens through intravenous catheters, length of time tourniquet is applied), and skill of the health care professional. These factors can also have a direct effect on the outcome of the eventual examination result. In specimen collection, nothing can replace the value of a properly identified patient and accurately labeled specimen to provide clinically useful information on which the health care provider (HCP) can base medical, diagnostic, and treatment decisions. See CLSI documents GP332 for patient identification and specimen labeling, GP413 for the venipuncture collection procedure, and GP424 for the capillary blood collection procedure.
The number of measurands and types of specimens used for medical laboratory examinations is broad. This guideline covers many of the measurands and specimen types in use. Although it includes new technologies and methodologies, it is not a comprehensive discussion of all possible blood specimen requirements. PRE04 also includes a detailed discussion of centrifugation and centrifuged specimen quality, taking into consideration the specimen collection tube, additives, temperature, time of applied force, and other conditions. In addition, guidance on temperature monitoring during transport is provided. This guideline can be used globally to standardize processes and to help laboratories meet accreditation and regulatory requirements related to maintaining the quality of blood specimens throughout the laboratory’s path of workflow.
This guideline can assist laboratorians and other health care professionals to recognize factors that affect specimen quality so that many sources of error can be minimized or eliminated before the specimen is affected.
The recommendations focus solely on blood specimens, but the principles can be applied to specimens in other laboratory areas as well.