PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Benefits of VISION Max automated cross-matching in comparison with manual cross-matching: A multidimensional analysis.

  • Hee-Jung Chung,
  • Mina Hur,
  • Sang Gyeu Choi,
  • Hyun-Kyung Lee,
  • Seungho Lee,
  • Hanah Kim,
  • Hee-Won Moon,
  • Yeo-Min Yun

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226477
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 12
p. e0226477

Abstract

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BackgroundVISION Max (Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, Raritan, NJ, USA) is a newly introduced automated blood bank system. Cross-matching (XM) is an important test confirming safety by simulating reaction between packed Red Blood Cells (RBCs) and patient blood in vitro before transfusion. We assessed the benefits of VISION Max automated XM (A-XM) in comparison with those of manual XM (M-XM) by using multidimensional analysis (cost-effectiveness and quality improvement).Materials and methodsIn a total of 327 tests (130 patients), results from A-XM and M-XM were compared. We assessed the concordance rate, risk priority number (RPN), turnaround time, hands-on time, and the costs of both methods. We further simulated their annual effects based on 37,937 XM tests in 2018.ResultsThe concordance rate between A-XM and M-XM was 97.9% (320/327, kappa = 0.83), and the seven discordant results were incompatible for transfusion in A-XM, while compatible for transfusion in M-XM. None of the results was incompatible for transfusion in A-XM, while compatible for transfusion in M-XM, meaning A-XM detect agglutination more sensitively and consequently provides a more safe result than M-XM. A-XM was estimated to have a 6.3-fold lower risk (229 vs. 1,435 RPN), shorter turnaround time (19.1 vs. 23.3 min, P ConclusionThis is the first attempt to implement A-XM using VISION Max. VISION Max A-XM appears to be a safe, practical, and reliable alternative for pre-transfusion workflow with the potential to improve quality and cost-effectiveness in the blood bank.