We scan in at the point of accessioning and do one piece flow. As Tim stated, 
even though the APLIS and technology can do certain things, it is only as good 
and streamlined as the process and people behind it.  

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Morken, Timothy
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2013 9:50 AM
To: 'Michael Mihalik'; 'histonet'
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

Michael, yes that is the sort of workflow item that has to be considered. We 
plan to use the scanned image at the gross bench to double check. 

Tim Morken
Supervisor, Electron Microscopy and Neuromuscular Special Studies UC San 
Francisco Medical Center San Francisco, CA


-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Mihalik [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2013 9:47 AM
To: Morken, Timothy; 'Bauer, Karen L.'; 'Jesus Ellin'; 'WILLIAM DESALVO'; 
'Matthew D. Roark'; 'histonet'
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

Just a quick thought....

If you scan your requisition into the LIS after accessioning, it might not be a 
bad idea to have your grossing personnel review the requisition at grossing to 
confirm that the patient name/specimen on the paperwork matches
what's in the LIS.   Yes, with barcodes this shouldn't happen, but it's a
nice double check.

Michael Mihalik
PathView Systems | cell: 214.733.7688 | 800.798.3540 | fax: 952.241.7369


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Morken, Timothy
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2013 9:23 AM
To: 'Bauer, Karen L.'; 'Jesus Ellin'; 'WILLIAM DESALVO'; 'Matthew D. Roark'; 
'histonet'
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

Karen, we are going to move to a system as you describe. At accessioning all 
paperwork will be scanned and none will follow the specimen. The critical trick 
is getting residents and pathologists to look at screens rather than hard 
copies. We spend way too much time printing and collating hard copies of 
reports ever day.

Tim Morken
Pathology
UC San Francisco Medical Center
San Francisco, CA


-----Original Message-----
From: Bauer, Karen L. [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2013 9:03 AM
To: Morken, Timothy; 'Jesus Ellin'; 'WILLIAM DESALVO'; 'Matthew D. Roark'; 
'histonet'
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems
Importance: Low

Jesus, Tim, and Bill...  Wonderful communication about specimen tracking, 
bi-directional capabilities, and creating a histology lab that will be 
effective in the years to come!!  I loved reading your information!

We also have the Vantage system and it's helped us decrease our slide labeling 
error rate to 0%!  It's wonderful and I'm so glad we finally had it implemented 
last April.  Our workflow seems much more efficient, since we no longer have to 
perform all of those manual reconciliation steps.

Yes, the bi-directionality of the systems (we have Sunquest CoPath) is a 
downfall of the software, but the pros of Vantage outweighed that flaw.  I'm 
hoping that in the years to come, that will be fixed.


A new question for the Histo group... 

We are trying to get away from printed grossing working drafts that are 
submitted with the slides and delivered to the pathologists.  We would like the 
docs to scan the slide at their microscope and have the patient information 
show up on their computer.  The pathologists still want the paper requisition 
from the specimen, so I suggested to have the requisition scanned and attached 
in the digital format.  This way, when the doc scans the slide, the CoPath 
working draft, the patient clinical hx, and the scanned req slip can be viewed.

Is anyone doing this in their lab right now?  If so, I would really like to 
hear more about how you and your LIS made that happen.  

Thanks so much and Happy Friday!!!!!    :)

Karen

Karen L. Bauer HTL/HT (ASCP) | Histology Supervisor | Pathology | MOHS Lab 
Supervisor | Dermatology | Phone: 715-838-3205 | [email protected] | Mayo 
Clinic Health System | 1221 Whipple Street | Eau Claire, WI 54702 | 
mayoclinichealthsystem.org

 


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Morken, Timothy
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2013 10:06 AM
To: 'Jesus Ellin'; 'WILLIAM DESALVO'; Matthew D. Roark; histonet
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

Jesus, the topic of bi-directional interfaces is fraught with both technical 
and political issues. Technically it is certainly possible (As a software 
developer colleague of mine always told us - 'don't ask if I can do it, just 
tell me what you want. It's just software'). The issue is who pays for it, and 
who wants it. As I see it, the large LIS companies got caught flat-footed by 
the desire of histology labs to move to barcoding. Indeed, when I worked for a 
company that manufactured immunostainers we approached several large LIS 
companies about integrating our bar-code-driven instrument with their systems 
(we had already prototyped it in our lab with our own mockup of an LIS). I kid 
you not, the response of each and every one of them was "Why would you want to 
do that?" Next, they said they could do it if we had a customer that would pay 
for it. Here in Silicon Valley, where products are developed on the premise 
that people don't know what they want until you give it to them, that's like 
admitting you are clueless.

Most of these LIS companies are not very proactive and are largely 
unimaginative in their outlook. That is why Ventana, Leica and others were able 
to step into that gap and develop their own systems. And at places like U of W 
they developed their own tracking systems and fully integrated it to their LIS 
because their LIS did not have anything even planned for barcoding.

But now these same LIS companies have finally figured out that that the 
barcoding ship is leaving the dock and they are scrambling to develop their own 
systems to compete with the stand-alone systems like Vantage and Cerebro. Due 
to that competition these LIS companies may not be willing to allow true 
bi-directional communication - it totally undercuts anything they may develop. 
They are already  at least 5 years behind the curve and can't allow the other 
companies to gain any further advantage. 

Tim Morken


-----Original Message-----
From: Jesus Ellin [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, November 01, 2013 6:54 AM
To: Morken, Timothy; 'WILLIAM DESALVO'; Matthew D. Roark; histonet
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

I would like to chime in on this Bill and Tim both gave great examples of what 
it takes to move in this direction.  But I would also like to understand why 
there are so many challenges in getting the data back into
the APLIS with updates and orders.   I would tell people the biggest concern
that I have the data being produced by a system should be accessible across all 
gradients of the workflow and not just the unique tracking system.  Not only is 
this tracking system positioned to help out histology with what is being 
explained below, but it is the foundation work in taking steps to get to the 
next level when talking Digital Pathology, molecular, Personalized
medicine,  Pathologist cockpit, and algorithm analysis.    

With the looming cuts coming down the pike, we have to make sure the vendors 
understand we cannot have barriers when it comes to interface and 
interoperability with our system.  At the same token we cannot be charges an 
arm, leg and torso for interfacing what is rightfully ours and that is the 
patients data we produce.

Bill and Tim excellent job in giving a crash course in Tracking system 101,, I 
do believe we should see more of this explained at professional societies 
meeting and also what the new environments we are going to be working in 
because of this technology.  





Just my two cents

Jesus Ellin


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Morken, Timothy
Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2013 3:45 PM
To: 'WILLIAM DESALVO'; Matthew D. Roark; histonet
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

I agree with Bill on this. We have Cerner Copath Plus and looked at Cerebro, 
Vantage and Omnitrax. Only Cerebro and Vantage were capable of working with 
Copath. But the problem is that Copath requires you purchase their tracking 
system to use as an HL-7 interface to any third party system. AND there is not 
two-way communication between the systems. You MUST enter orders (cases, 
blocks, stains) in copath and it ports orders to the other system. The only 
feedback is status updates to copath - you cannot add items in the other system 
and expect them to show up in copath. That requirement effectively doubled the 
price of the system. So we are using only the Copath AB&T system, which we are 
starting to implement now. They will finally have touch screen capability in 
the spring so we were satisfied with that. Touch screens were a primary spec we 
demanded. 

The key to tracking is how the tracking system works with your current LIS.
Can it communicate in a true bi-directional fashion? Is it just an add on and 
all the tracking info is in the tracking component, not the LIS? There are 
tradeoffs and you need to figure out which you want to live with.

We spent two years investigating all these systems, doing site visits, and 
going through a 6-month total LEAN evaluation. The one thing every institution 
told us was: LEAN your system BEFORE adding barcoding.
Barcoding will NOT fix any inefficiencies you have. And you are pretty much 
stuck with what ever system you barcode - warts and all. So do all the hard 
work up front. 

We thought we were prepared but are daily finding all kinds of little details 
that have to be worked out. Detail out every single little thing about all your 
workflows before starting anything. Streamline everything.

Cassette printing is the heart of barcoding. The barcoded (actually usually 2D 
matrix codes) on the cassette drive grossing, tracking through processing, 
embedding and cutting. If that does not work reliably your system will not 
work. 

We went with Leica cassette printers. They are huge, but fast (5 sec per cass). 
We were going to use thermo, but they had their printhead problem and we 
dropped the order. They are 20+ seconds per cassttes, tho have a very compact 
footprint. You will find there are tradeoffs to everything.

Slide labeling is the other half of the equation. They must be reliable and 
survive all histology procedures. 

We will use thermal transfer label printers rather than direct slide (too
expensive- we will have a printer at each microtome- and cumbersome to change 
out slide types). Slide labeling is a HUGE deal - you have to be sure it works 
for everything and can be used in your immuno stainers and coverslipping 
machines. We are using either Brady StainerBondz labels or LabTags Xylituff 
labels. These were the only ones that had the size we wanted (23 x 19 mm) and 
survived all processes. General data StainerShield are also good, but only come 
in 22 x 22 size. Plus are the most expensive.

You will find it much easier if you use labels and ribbons from one 
manufacturer, designed to use with specific printers. That simplifies a lot of 
the effort. We have tried to mix and match but it is very difficult because all 
manufacturers do not make matching labels and ribbons for all printers. 



Tim Morken
Supervisor, Electron Microscopy and Neuromuscular Special Studies UC San 
Francisco Medical Center San Francisco, CA

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of WILLIAM DESALVO
Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2013 3:01 PM
To: Matthew D. Roark; histonet
Subject: RE: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems

My lab chose the Ventana Vantage System w/ Thermo PrintMate cassette printers. 
We are a multi-location system and Vantage works well for us. We wanted a 
robust tracking and flexible quality assurance system and Ventana provided what 
we needed and wanted.
 
I suggest you look at the big four to start your evaluation:
Ventana - Vantage
Leica- Cerebro
Thermo- OmniTrax
General Data - HTS
 
The larger companies have more interfaces built for the different LIS used in 
Histology. There are many smaller companies that offer tracking systems, but 
make sure they can connect w/ your LIS.  After product selection, support is 
critical.
 
Sunquest and Cerner Millennium now offer tracking and quality assurance 
modules. And I imagine there are other tracking systems built into more LIS.
 
You will also want to evaluate multiple printers for your cassettes. Always 
keep in mind the amount of information you will be adding to the cassette a 
this will reduce the number of cassettes/ minute. Start w/ the tracking system 
vendor and see what the have validated. Consider the upkeep and maintenance of 
the printer. We choose heat transfer, but there are Laser and Ink-jet that work 
really well. We chose to point of generation and wanted a very small footprint 
to place the printers in the grossing stations.
 
We also choose not to use a slide printing system and decided the bar coded 
labels at microtomy was the best solution for us. We wanted less maintenance 
and steady throughput. Easier to load a roll of labels than keeping a printer 
up and running.
 
Last, but certainly not least, support. You will need a ton of support to work 
through this project: interfaces, IT upgrades, software adjustments, WORKFLOW 
changes and training. Plan and re-plan before you make your selection. And 
negotiate hard, the pricing is all over the place for the
systems.   
 

William DeSalvo, BS HTL(ASCP)
Production Manager-Anatomic Pathology
Chair, NSH Quality Management Committee
Board Member, Digital Pathology Association Owner/Consultant, Collaborative 
Advantage Consulting

 
> From: [email protected]
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Thu, 31 Oct 2013 20:21:47 +0000
> Subject: [Histonet] Specimen Tracking Systems
> 
> What systems are people using for specimen tracking?  I'm looking for 
> the
whole package of cassette printers, work station slide printers, tracking 
software, etc...
> 
> Any help and recommendations would be appreciated!
> 
> 
> 
> Matthew Roark- HT/HTL(ASCP)CM
> Histology Specialist
> Saint Francis Medical Center
> 211 Saint Francis Drive
> Cape Girardeau, MO 63703
> 573-331-3982
> [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
> http://www.sfmc.net<http://www.sfmc.net/>
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Histonet mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.utsouthwestern.edu/mailman/listinfo/histonet
 
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