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Vet Clin Pathol [JOURNAL]

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Gastrointestinal colonization by Diutina (Candida) rugosa in a 6-year-old Siberian Husky.

Randolph NK, Her J, McAloney CA … +1 more , Wellman M

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Jun · PMID 38418373 · Publisher ↗

A 6-year-old 21.5 kg castrated male Siberian Husky was presented for acute onset of lethargy, vomiting, hemorrhagic diarrhea, and inappetence. Physical examination revealed marked discomfort upon abdominal palpation and... A 6-year-old 21.5 kg castrated male Siberian Husky was presented for acute onset of lethargy, vomiting, hemorrhagic diarrhea, and inappetence. Physical examination revealed marked discomfort upon abdominal palpation and 5%-7% dehydration. The CBC and biochemical profile revealed changes consistent with mild to moderate inflammation, dehydration, and gastrointestinal (GI) disease. Despite aggressive gastrointestinal support, anorexia persisted, and an upper GI endoscopy was performed in conjunction with esophagostomy tube placement. Endoscopy revealed abnormal gastric mucosa characterized by moderately well-demarcated areas of blue-black discoloration. Impression smears of a gastric biopsy revealed abundant extracellular yeasts with morphology most consistent with Candida spp. and frequent extracellular cocci. Similar yeast and bacteria, in lower numbers, were observed on cytologic analysis of a direct smear of the rectal mucosa. A rectal swab submitted for fungal culture yielded pure growth of fungal yeasts identified as Diutina (formerly Candida) rugosa by matrix-assisted laser desorption-ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry. The dog's clinical signs improved with fluconazole, and he was discharged. Follow-up fungal culture of a rectal swab showed no growth of D. rugosa. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first case report that describes the clinical, hematologic, cytologic, and gross findings of enteric colonization by D. rugosa in a dog.

What is your diagnosis? External bilateral ear cysts in a cat.

Paz MC, Santos IR, Cony FG … +3 more , Bandinelli MB, Pöppl AG, Pavarini SP

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 May · PMID 38413361 · Publisher ↗

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What is your diagnosis? Subcutaneous inguinal mass in a dog.

Lamego EC, Paz MC, Dos Santos IR … +6 more , de Melo SMP, da Silva EC, Assumpção TS, Stumm GKF, Pavarini SP, Bandinelli MB

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 May · PMID 38403706 · Publisher ↗

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A comparison study between the Siemens ADVIA 120 and manual method for the differential white blood cell count in goats.

Oikonomidis IL, Brozos C, Tsouloufi TK … +2 more , Kiossis E, Kritsepi-Konstantinou M

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38395432 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Although widely used, the ADVIA 120 hematology analyzer has not been previously validated for determining the differential leukocyte count in goats. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to compare the differ... BACKGROUND: Although widely used, the ADVIA 120 hematology analyzer has not been previously validated for determining the differential leukocyte count in goats. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to compare the differential leukocyte counts provided by the ADVIA 120 (A-diff) and the manual method (M-Diff) in goats. METHODS: EDTA blood samples that were analyzed within 4 h of collection were used in the study. The following exclusion criteria were applied: inappropriately filled tubes or tubes containing clots, erroneous ADVIA peroxidase cytograms, and blood smears of poor quality. The A-Diff was compared with the M-Diff performed by two independent observers on 200 leukocytes. RESULTS: Forty samples were included after previously excluding eight samples. The correlation between the A-Diff and M-Diff was very strong for eosinophils (r = .870, p < .001) and strong for lymphocytes (r = .796, p < .001) and neutrophils (r = .730, p < .001), while no significant correlation was observed for monocytes (r = .026, p = .872). The Passing-Bablok regression analyses revealed statistically significant constant errors for neutrophils (5.83%; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.41%, 12.18%) and eosinophils (1.89%; 95% CI: 1.17%, 2.71%). Bland-Altman analyses showed a statistically significant negative bias for lymphocytes (-5.0%) and a statistically significant positive bias for eosinophils (2.2%). The very low basophil percentages precluded a meaningful method comparison. CONCLUSIONS: The ADVIA 120 overall demonstrated good performance for the differential WBC count in goats under the conditions of this study. Therefore, it can be considered suitable for routine hematologic screening in goats. Nonetheless, it should be emphasized that any abnormal result should be confirmed with a blood smear evaluation.

What is your diagnosis? Cervical mass in a dog.

Draper ACE, Oikonomidis I, Pastorello A … +2 more , McKenzie R, Le Calvez S

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 May · PMID 38383829 · Publisher ↗

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Comments for the Veterinary Clinical Pathology special issue on laboratory quality management.

Freeman K

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Feb · PMID 38379055 · Publisher ↗

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Repeat patient testing-quality control compared to commercial quality control material for the Sysmex XT-2000iV hematology analyzer in a multi-site veterinary laboratory.

Daly S, Rishniw M, Graham PA … +1 more , Freeman KP

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Feb · PMID 38356015 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Quality control material (QCM) for hematology in veterinary laboratories is limited, and repeat patient testing quality control (RPT-QC) is an alternative method using excess matrix-specific samples. OBJECTIV... BACKGROUND: Quality control material (QCM) for hematology in veterinary laboratories is limited, and repeat patient testing quality control (RPT-QC) is an alternative method using excess matrix-specific samples. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to determine if median differences between RPT-QC analyses for each time interval for RBC, HGB, HCT, and WBC were the same, determine if unified RPT-QC limits can be applied to a network of veterinary laboratories, compare the performance of RPT-QC to commercial QCM for the reference analyzer and evaluate the experience over a 4 month period and design, improve and implement an automated spreadsheet for RPT-QC data management. METHODS: The potential to unify individual analyzer RPT-QC limits for red blood cells (RBC), hematocrit (HCT), hemoglobin (HGB), and white blood cells (WBC) on multi-site Sysmex XT-2000-iV analyzers was explored by a difference of means test and confidence interval determination for the median difference for each network analyzer in comparison to the network reference analyzer. User experience of an automated RPT-QC data management Excel spreadsheet was collected by user feedback during monthly meetings. Numbers of out-of-control results and the root causes for these for RPT-QC were compared against those of a commercial QCM over a 4-month period. RESULTS: Differences between individual analyzer RPT-QC limits were too large to allow for unification of network limits. The automated spreadsheet successfully highlighted out-of-control events for RPT-QC. Trends or shifts were more frequent for commercial QCM based on observed performance and a 1-2.5 s QC rule than for RPT-QC. Following routine troubleshooting, RPT-QC out-of-control events were resolved with an alternative RPT-QC sample indicating random error associated with excessive deterioration. Use of an automated spreadsheet for recording RPT-QC, documentation and troubleshooting of out-of-control events, and collating monthly summary calculations were considered an asset in laboratory quality management. CONCLUSIONS: RPT-QC can be successfully implemented and integrated into a multi-site veterinary laboratory. Individual analyzer RPT-QC limit generation is recommended. The deterioration of commercial QCM caused shifts or trends in QC results, which initiated more repeat analyses and investigations than did RPT-QC.

Development of a reference interval for urinary ammonia-to-creatinine ratio in feline patients.

Brown EE, Castro RA, Griffin FC … +7 more , Mandese WW, Rooks JK, Stone AE, Wuerz JA, Cooke KL, Specht AJ, Harris AN

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38321630 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Disruption of acid-base homeostasis can lead to many clinical problems. Ammonia excretion by the kidneys is critical to maintaining acid-base homeostasis through bicarbonate production. Measurement of ammonia... BACKGROUND: Disruption of acid-base homeostasis can lead to many clinical problems. Ammonia excretion by the kidneys is critical to maintaining acid-base homeostasis through bicarbonate production. Measurement of ammonia excretion may help determine if the kidneys are properly functioning in maintaining acid-base balance. Reference intervals are essential tools for clinical decision-making but do not currently exist for urinary ammonia-to-creatinine ratio (UACR) in feline patients. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to generate a reference interval (RI) for UACR in healthy adult cats. METHODS: The study used samples from client-owned adult healthy cats that presented to the University of Florida Primary Care and Dentistry service (n = 92). Physical examination, serum biochemistry, urinalysis, urine ammonia, and creatinine concentrations were measured. Cats were excluded if there were significant abnormalities in their urinalysis or biochemistry panel. The RI for UACR was calculated according to the recommendation of the American Society for Veterinary Clinical Pathology. The UACR was evaluated for correlation with serum bicarbonate, weight, age, and sex. RESULTS: The RI for UACR was 3.4-20.7 with 90% confidence intervals for the lower and upper limits of (3.0-3.7) and (16.0-23.7), respectively. No significant correlation with age, sex, or weight was found. There was no discernable relationship between serum bicarbonate and UACR. CONCLUSIONS: Establishing an RI for UACR in healthy adult cats will allow further studies to determine if changes in UACR are observed during specific disease states.

Diagnostic utility of the total nucleated cell count for differentiation of septic and sterile peritoneal effusions in dogs.

DiDomenico AE, Jacob ME, Stowe DM … +1 more , Gruber EJ

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38321629 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Rapid and accurate diagnosis of septic peritonitis is critical for initiating appropriate medical and surgical management. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to determine the diagnostic utility of the tota... BACKGROUND: Rapid and accurate diagnosis of septic peritonitis is critical for initiating appropriate medical and surgical management. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to determine the diagnostic utility of the total nucleated cell count (TNCC), absolute neutrophil count, neutrophil percentage, and total protein (TP) to distinguish septic versus non-septic peritoneal effusions in dogs. METHODS: Electronic medical records were retrospectively searched for peritoneal fluid samples from 2008 to 2018 and classified as septic or non-septic based on bacterial culture and/or cytology results. Receiver operator characteristic curves (ROCs) were used to describe the overall diagnostic utility of each test, with optimal cutpoints analyzed to dichotomize continuous variables. Positive and negative likelihood ratios were calculated at these cutpoints. RESULTS: A total of 166 unique samples, including 87 septic and 79 non-septic peritoneal effusions, were included. There were no significant differences in dog sex, age, or days hospitalized between groups. Septic effusions had significantly higher TP, TNCC, absolute neutrophil count, and neutrophil percentage compared with non-septic effusions. The area under the curve of the ROC curves was TNCC (0.80), absolute neutrophil count (0.80), neutrophil percentage (0.64), and TP (0.63). For TNCC and absolute neutrophil count, optimal cutoffs were 17.13 × 10  cells/μL and 19.88 × 10  cells/μL, resulting in positive and negative likelihood ratios of 2.39 and 0.28 and 2.85 and 0.28, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Total nucleated cell counts and absolute neutrophil counts aid in the differentiation of septic and non-septic peritoneal effusions with similar diagnostic utility but are not sufficiently sensitive or specific to use without concurrent microscopic evaluation.

Analytical performance of feline plasma on current Heska and IDEXX point-of-care biochemistry analyzers compared with a commercial laboratory analyzer.

Baral RM, Jaensch SM, Hayward DA … +1 more , Freeman KP

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Sep · PMID 38321616 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Point-of-care (POC) biochemistry analyzers are widely used in small animal clinical practice but infrequently independently assessed for performance. OBJECTIVE: To assess the performance of two current model... BACKGROUND: Point-of-care (POC) biochemistry analyzers are widely used in small animal clinical practice but infrequently independently assessed for performance. OBJECTIVE: To assess the performance of two current model point-of-care biochemistry analyzers (Heska Element DC and IDEXX Catalyst) compared with a commercial laboratory analyzer (Cobas 8000). METHODS: One hundred twenty-one cats from a feline hospital population were sampled with plasma results from a single lithium heparin tube assessed on all three analyzers. Plasma biochemistry results from each POC analyzer were compared with the commercial laboratory analyzer using Bland-Altman difference plots and by determining whether the limits of agreement (LOAs) (95% of differences) fell within various quality goals after correcting for inherent bias. RESULTS: Only 7 of 14 analytes on the Heska analyzer and 2 analytes on the IDEXX analyzer attained the most stringent LOA quality goal, which was being within desirable total error based on biologic variation (TE). The number of analytes achieving quality goals increased with less stringent standards such as American Society of Veterinary Clinical Pathologists allowable total error (ASVCP TE) guidelines or if <95% of clinical comparisons reaching these quality goals is considered acceptable. Widespread bias was found between both POC analyzers and the commercial laboratory analyzer. CONCLUSIONS: The performance of both POC biochemistry analyzers was variable compared with a commercial laboratory analyzer. Performance goals were only able to be attained after the bias for each analyzer was accounted for by offsetting the LOAs and quality goals set by the mean bias for each analyte on each analyzer.

Adipocytes in synovial fluid cytology: An approach for diagnosing synovial lipomatosis.

Agulla B, Vizcaíno N, Velarde R … +3 more , Estruch J, Domínguez E, Pastor J

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38320970 · Publisher ↗

A 2-year-old neutered male bullmastiff dog was presented with chronic left hind limb lameness. Physical examination revealed left stifle effusion and medial buttress without cranial tibial thrust. Radiographs showed join... A 2-year-old neutered male bullmastiff dog was presented with chronic left hind limb lameness. Physical examination revealed left stifle effusion and medial buttress without cranial tibial thrust. Radiographs showed joint effusion and new bone formation at the patella apex. Magnetic resonance imaging showed increased synovial fluid, widening of the joint space, abnormal infrapatellar fat body and thinning of the cranial cruciate ligament. Synoviocentesis and cytologic evaluation of synovial fluid revealed marked mononuclear inflammation with abundant fatty tissue, suggesting synovial lipomatosis in conjunction with the imaging findings. The disease was confirmed histologically after sampling the lesion during arthrotomy. Synovial lipomatosis, characterized by extensive synovial adipose tissue proliferation of the synovial membrane, is a rare "tumor-like" disorder that usually affects the stifle. Although the etiology remains unclear, joint trauma, inflammation, instability, and lipid abnormalities have been proposed as causes. Inflammatory factors may promote synoviocyte and adipocyte hyperplasia that perpetuate the process. Surgical removal may be suggested to eliminate triggers and prevent future recurrences. The report provides the first cytological description of adipocytes in synovial fluid associated with the diagnosis of synovial lipomatosis in dogs. This case report underscores the potential effectiveness of cytologic analysis of synovial fluid smears, in combination with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), for diagnosing this condition and reducing complications associated with arthrotomy for sampling purposes. Additionally, the case highlights that synovial lipomatosis should be considered as a potential differential diagnosis for synovial masses in dogs. Further cases are needed to validate these observations in veterinary medicine.

Serum vitamin D3 (25-OH vit D3) concentrations and hemogram changes in calves with enzootic pneumonia.

Ertunç S, Mecitoğlu Z, Kasap S … +1 more , Şentürk S

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38320962 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Enzootic pneumonia is an important disease complex associated with insufficient colostrum intake after birth, adverse environmental conditions, and stress. Vitamin D deficiency may be an important predisposin... BACKGROUND: Enzootic pneumonia is an important disease complex associated with insufficient colostrum intake after birth, adverse environmental conditions, and stress. Vitamin D deficiency may be an important predisposing factor for this disease. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to investigate in calves with enzootic pneumonia. METHODS: A total of 30 calves, aged 3-5 months, under the same care and feeding conditions were used. Groups were formed according to Clinical Respiratory Scoring as the group with mild/moderate enzootic pneumonia (n = 10), the group with severe enzootic pneumonia (n = 10), and the healthy control group (n = 10) without any disease. Blood samples were collected from the jugular vein of animals in all groups on Day 0; a complete blood count was performed, and serum vitamin D levels were measured using the Liquid Chromatography-Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) method. RESULTS: Although no statistical differences were observed in total leukocyte, lymphocyte, eosinophil, basophil, hemoglobin, and hematocrit levels between groups, statistically significant differences in blood neutrophil, monocyte, and erythrocyte counts were found between the groups. Monocyte counts were statistically decreased in the mild/moderate group compared with the control group. Neutrophil counts were significantly higher in the mild/moderate and severe groups than in the control group. Erythrocyte counts were increased in the mild/moderate and severe groups compared with the control group. Vitamin D concentrations were statistically lower in the mild/moderate and severe groups than in the control group. However, no statistical differences in Vitamin D concentrations were observed between the mild/moderate and severe groups. There was a negative and significant correlation between erythrocyte counts and vitamin D concentrations (r = -0.64, P < .0001). While erythrocyte counts increased in the severe group compared with the mild/moderate group, vitamin D concentrations decreased. Also, a negative and significant correlation was observed between platelet counts and vitamin D concentrations (r = -0.74, P < .0001). CONCLUSIONS: The results of this study determined that serum vitamin D concentrations in calves with pneumonia were lower than those in healthy calves. Detailed studies on the etiologic and prognostic importance of low vitamin D levels in calves with enzootic pneumonia may provide valuable data for prevention and treatment.

What is your diagnosis? Blood smear from a Corolla wild horse stallion.

Benedict W, Parsley A, Mochizuki H

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 May · PMID 38302716 · Publisher ↗

Abstract loading — click title to view on PubMed.

Atypical disseminated histiocytic sarcoma in a 7-month-old dog.

Garcia-Torres M, Muñoz BS, Segalés J … +4 more , Mallol C, Sanz A, López MC, Roura X

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38242688 · Publisher ↗

A 7-month-old intact female bearded collie dog was admitted after a 2-week history of progressive cough, inappetence, and lethargy, with no response to previous treatment with doxycycline and steroids. Mild attenuation o... A 7-month-old intact female bearded collie dog was admitted after a 2-week history of progressive cough, inappetence, and lethargy, with no response to previous treatment with doxycycline and steroids. Mild attenuation of lung sounds in the right middle hemithorax was the only abnormality detected on physical examination. Abdominal ultrasound and thoracic radiographs were performed and revealed multifocally distributed nodules and masses, well-circumscribed and of variable size in the kidneys and pulmonary parenchyma. Ultrasound-guided fine needle aspirates of the renal and pulmonary masses were taken. A cytologic evaluation of these lesions pointed towards a malignant mesenchymal neoplasia. Euthanasia was elected due to the poor prognosis and rapid progression. The post-mortem histopathology, a positive result to IBA1 immunoperoxidase staining, and a lack of detection of infectious agents, and negative E-cadherin immunostaining enabled the final diagnosis of a disseminated histiocytic sarcoma. We report an atypical form, both in breed and age, of canine disseminated histiocytic sarcoma. While all breeds can be affected, there is a clear predisposition in some, and no cases have been previously described in bearded collies. Moreover, to the authors' knowledge, this is the youngest dog with this histiocytic disorder described to date. Disseminated histiocytic sarcoma should be considered as a differential diagnosis of multinodular tumors in dogs, regardless of the anatomic location and age of the dogs, even in puppies.

Multiple myeloma in dogs: Use of the cell block technique as a new diagnostic tool.

Valente PCLG, Peleteiro MC, Dias MJ … +4 more , Vicente G, Pomba C, Duarte A, Correia J

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38240087 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: The diagnosis of multiple myeloma (MM) in dogs may be challenging and complex. The cell blocks are a diagnostic technique that allows the characterization of neoplastic cells and, therefore, might help in the... BACKGROUND: The diagnosis of multiple myeloma (MM) in dogs may be challenging and complex. The cell blocks are a diagnostic technique that allows the characterization of neoplastic cells and, therefore, might help in the diagnosis of atypical MM. OBJECTIVE: The objective of the present work is to describe three clinical cases in which the cell blocks and immunohistochemistry contributed to the definitive diagnosis of canine MM. METHODS: Three dogs, one female and two males, with different clinical signs, were presented for consultation with anemia, hyperproteinemia with monoclonal gammopathy, and the presence of plasmacytosis in the bone marrow. Cytologic analysis of the spleen was performed in two dogs and was suggestive of the presence of lymphocytes or plasma cells of a neoplastic nature in one of the cases and plasma cell hyperplasia associated with extramedullary hematopoiesis in the other. Given the hypotheses of lymphoid neoplasms with a plasma cell phenotype, cell blocks from aspiration punctures were performed for immunohistochemical analysis with anti-CD3, CD20, CD79αcy, PAX5, and MUM1 antibodies. RESULTS: The results revealed positive staining for MUM1 in 80% of the cells in the spleen cell block and for CD20 and MUM1 in 70% of the cells in the bone marrow cell blocks, with negative staining for the other antibodies. The immunophenotyping results allowed the diagnosis of MM in the three cases and excluded other lymphoid neoplasms. CONCLUSIONS: This work reinforces the importance of using cell blocks in the diagnosis of neoplasms by demonstrating their potential to aid the diagnosis of MM.

Association of leukergy (in vitro leukocyte aggregation) with systemic inflammation in dogs and cats (2017-2022).

Nolen-Walston RD, Stefanoski D, Conrado FO

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38239045 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Leukergy is the phenomenon of aggregation of leukocytes on a peripheral blood film, and in humans, it is used as an indicator of systemic inflammation and infection. OBJECTIVES: To assess the association of l... BACKGROUND: Leukergy is the phenomenon of aggregation of leukocytes on a peripheral blood film, and in humans, it is used as an indicator of systemic inflammation and infection. OBJECTIVES: To assess the association of leukergy on blood film examination with biochemical and clinical evidence of systemic inflammation, infection, neoplasia, or specific organ system disease. METHODS: A case-control study using retrospective analysis (2017-2022) identified all canine and feline patients that had been presented to an academic referral center with a finding of leukergy on peripheral blood film and an equal number of species-matched controls. RESULTS: A total of 127 cases (canine n = 44, feline n = 83) were identified, as well as 127 controls. Feline samples were 7.6× more likely to exhibit leukergy (0.019%) than canine (0.0025%). A positive association was noted between leukergy and higher globulin concentrations in dogs (marginal difference 0.5 mg/dL, P = .016) and cats (marginal difference 0.67 mg/dL, P = <.001). Cats with leukergy had higher WBC counts and were less likely to be diagnosed with cardiac or urinary tract disease than controls. Dogs with leukergy had lower WBC counts and were more likely to be febrile but were less likely to have urinary tract disease than controls. No association was found with neutrophil toxic change or band forms, systemic antimicrobial therapy, or signalment. CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that there is a positive association between increased globulin concentrations and leukergy and inconsistent associations between leukergy and other markers of inflammation or infection. Leukergy is rare overall but markedly more common in cats than dogs.

What is your diagnosis? A blood film and saliva direct smear from two inland bearded dragons (Pogona vitticeps).

Azevedo C, Rassin A, Brenner EE … +3 more , Wellehan JFX, Cray C, Stacy NI

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 May · PMID 38239044 · Publisher ↗

Abstract loading — click title to view on PubMed.

Are analytical performance specifications derived from reference intervals of any use in the veterinary clinical laboratory? A preliminary study on the empirical biological variation model.

Manzocchi S, van Rooyen LJ

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Feb · PMID 38238987 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: Analytical performance specifications (APS) are vital for method evaluation and quality control validation. However, the limited availability of biological variation (BV) data, regulatory guidelines, and expe... BACKGROUND: Analytical performance specifications (APS) are vital for method evaluation and quality control validation. However, the limited availability of biological variation (BV) data, regulatory guidelines, and expert opinion (EO) may present challenges in veterinary medicine. The empirical biological variation (EBV) approach, based on population reference intervals (pRI), has emerged as an alternative method to derive APS in human medicine. OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to assess the practicality and usefulness of the EBV approach in deriving performance limits for various measurands in dogs and cats. METHODS: Eight hematology and 13 biochemistry measurands were analyzed in dogs and cats. Estimates of combined biologic variation based on traditional biological (CV ) and EBV-derived (CV *) formulas were calculated and assessed for evidence of correlation. Performance limits for expanded uncertainty/total error and imprecision were compared among EO, BV, and EBV. RESULTS: Strong and significant correlations were found between CV and CV * for both dogs (r = .86, p < .00001) and cats (r = 0.95, p < .00001). The EBV-derived APS were generally comparable to EO and BV, with a subjective criterion of 1.5% difference for imprecision and 3% for total error/expanded uncertainty. CONCLUSION: The EBV approach, using pRI, shows promise as a surrogate marker for biological variation and as a practical tool for determining performance limits in dogs and cats. Assuming accurate pRI generated on analyzers with stable analytical performance, this approach could offer benefits when expert recommendations or robust BV studies are lacking or yield conflicting results. Further research is needed to explore the applicability and advantages of the EBV in veterinary medicine.

Cytologic features of canine melanotroph and corticotroph pituitary adenomas.

Furtado AP, DeCourcey M, Miller MA … +6 more , Chen AV, Martin LG, Guess SC, Wardrop KJ, de Souza C, Owen TJ

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Mar · PMID 38238980 · Publisher ↗

BACKGROUND: The introduction of intraoperative cytology revolutionized neurosurgical procedures in human medicine, providing real-time diagnostic guidance to surgeons and contributing to improved patient outcomes. In the... BACKGROUND: The introduction of intraoperative cytology revolutionized neurosurgical procedures in human medicine, providing real-time diagnostic guidance to surgeons and contributing to improved patient outcomes. In the realm of veterinary medicine, the understanding of pituitary tumors in dogs and cats remains limited due to challenges in obtaining antemortem samples of central nervous system lesions. OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to describe the cytologic features of pituitary adenomas in 12 dogs that underwent hypophysectomy. METHODS: The series included nine melanotroph adenomas and three corticotroph adenomas. Definitive diagnosis was based on histopathology and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: Cytologically, the adenomas had high numbers of bare nuclei and intact cells that were round to polygonal and situated individually or in small clusters. The intact cells had round to oval, eccentric nuclei with finely stippled chromatin and one to three prominent nucleoli and ample to abundant lightly basophilic to amphophilic, grainy cytoplasm with distinct borders, and variable numbers of discrete vacuoles. Mild-to-moderate anisocytosis and anisokaryosis, occasional binucleation, rare and atypical mitotic figures, and nuclear molding were also observed. CONCLUSIONS: The results suggest that intraoperative cytology of canine pituitary adenomas holds promise as a valuable diagnostic tool, aiding swift differentiation from other sellar masses before histologic confirmation. Cytologic characterization of pituitary adenomas in dogs is exceptionally rare in the scientific literature, making this study one of the first to offer a comprehensive description of these cytologic features.

The importance of quality control validation and relationships with total error quality goals and bias in the interpretation of laboratory results.

Freeman K, Klenner-Gastreich S, Korchia J

Vet Clin Pathol · 2024 Feb · PMID 38165023 · Publisher ↗

The objective of a quality system is to provide accurate and reliable results for clinical decision-making. One part of this is Quality Control (QC) validation. QC validation is not routinely applied in veterinary labora... The objective of a quality system is to provide accurate and reliable results for clinical decision-making. One part of this is Quality Control (QC) validation. QC validation is not routinely applied in veterinary laboratories. This leads to the inappropriate usage of random QC rules without knowing the Probability of error detection (P ) and Probability of false rejection (P ) of a method. In this paper, we will discuss why QC validation is important, when it should be undertaken, why QC validation is done, and why it is not commonly done. We will present the role of total analytical error (TEa) in the QC validation process and the challenges when a consensus TEa has not been published. Finally, we will also discuss the possibilities of 'gray zone' determinations and mention the effects of bias on the quality of results. Reasons for the low prevalence of performing QC validation may include (a) lack of familiarity with the concept, (b) lack of time and resources needed to conduct QC validation, and (c) lack of TEa goal for some measurands. If no TEa is available, the user may elect to use a 'reverse approach' to QC validation. This uses the CV and bias generated from the evaluation of QC measurements, specifying P , P , and N (number of QC measurements/run). This identifies the lowest total error that can be controlled under these defined conditions, thus enabling the laboratory to have an estimate of the 'gray zone' associated with results generated with a specific assay.
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