Quality control of smear microscopy for acid-fast bacilli: the case for blinded re-reading

Int J Tuberc Lung Dis. 1999 Jan;3(1):55-61.

Abstract

Setting: Quality control of sputum smear microscopy, which is essential for ensuring correct tuberculosis (TB) diagnosis, is often performed through the unblinded rereading of all positive slides and a sample of negative slides.

Objective: To assess misclassification error introduced by knowledge of prior results.

Methods: The Southern Vietnam Regional TB Laboratory prepared three gold-standard sets of 750 slides: an unblinded set, an unblinded set in which 13% of negative slides were replaced by weakly positive slides purposefully mislabelled as negative, and a blinded set. Six provincial technicians who normally perform district quality control each reread 125 slides from each set.

Results: In the three sets only one negative slide was misread as positive. In the unblinded set (referent), 2.9% (9/311) positive slides were misread as negative, compared with 18.7% (57/305) in the blinded set (prevalence ratio [PR] = 6.5; 95% confidence interval [CI] 3.3-12.8; P < 0.001), and 11.3% (33/293) in the unblinded set with mislabelled slides (PR = 3.9; 95%CI 1.9-8.0; P < 0.001).

Conclusions: False-negative error was more common than false-positive error. Knowledge of prior reading influences re-reading. Blinded re-reading of systematically selected slides would appear preferable, although this method requires high levels of proficiency among quality control technicians.

MeSH terms

  • False Negative Reactions
  • False Positive Reactions
  • Humans
  • Quality Control*
  • Specimen Handling*
  • Sputum / microbiology*