TY - JOUR
T1 - Biochemical and microscopic urinalysis
T2 - Time and cost in a nephrology laboratory
AU - Piccoli, Giorgina Barbara
AU - Gai, Massimo
AU - Mezza, Elisabetta
AU - Fop, Fabrizio
AU - Cantaluppi, Vincenzo
AU - Quaglia, Marco
AU - Biancone, Luigi
AU - Jeantet, Alberto
AU - Lanfranco, Giacomo
AU - Segoloni, Giuseppe Paolo
PY - 2002/9
Y1 - 2002/9
N2 - Background. Urinalysis is a fundamental test in internal medicine and nephrology. Figures for costs are available in the general laboratory, where biochemical and microscopic urinalysis are commonly performed as semi-automated screening tests. Information on costs is lacking in the nephrology laboratory, where a time-consuming morphological analysis is usually preferred. This study analyses the costs of urinalysis in a nephrology laboratory. Methods. In the nephrology laboratory at the University of Turin - Italy, biochemical urinalysis consists of multi-property strip and proteinuria/creatininuria, done by laboratory technicians. Phase-contrast microscopy is done by a nephrologist or biologist. Time dedicated to the tests was recorded by the same operator over 20 working days, during which 350 urine samples were processed (median 19/day, range 8-42). The production costs were calculated with the logic bottom-up technique. Results. Overall time needed was 11.9 minutes/sample. Biochemical urinalysis required 6.6 minutes/sample; time required and samples processed were inversely related (≤19 samples: 7.95 minutes/sample; >19 samples: 5.6 minutes/sample, p=0.01). Microscopic urinalysis took 5.3 minutes/slide; the best time-to-samples ratio was at 18-22 samples per day (with peak efficiency at 21 samples: 4.6 minutes). Cost of reagents and disposables was Euro (€) 1.06/sample. Time accounted for €5.32/sample (technicians, nephrologist-biologist), with total direct cost of €6.38/sample. Conclusion. In a nephrology laboratory, microscopic urinalysis is a time-consuming, expensive test. Analysis of cost and modalities may be useful, in a time of budget constrains, to maintain a role for this precious semeiotic art.
AB - Background. Urinalysis is a fundamental test in internal medicine and nephrology. Figures for costs are available in the general laboratory, where biochemical and microscopic urinalysis are commonly performed as semi-automated screening tests. Information on costs is lacking in the nephrology laboratory, where a time-consuming morphological analysis is usually preferred. This study analyses the costs of urinalysis in a nephrology laboratory. Methods. In the nephrology laboratory at the University of Turin - Italy, biochemical urinalysis consists of multi-property strip and proteinuria/creatininuria, done by laboratory technicians. Phase-contrast microscopy is done by a nephrologist or biologist. Time dedicated to the tests was recorded by the same operator over 20 working days, during which 350 urine samples were processed (median 19/day, range 8-42). The production costs were calculated with the logic bottom-up technique. Results. Overall time needed was 11.9 minutes/sample. Biochemical urinalysis required 6.6 minutes/sample; time required and samples processed were inversely related (≤19 samples: 7.95 minutes/sample; >19 samples: 5.6 minutes/sample, p=0.01). Microscopic urinalysis took 5.3 minutes/slide; the best time-to-samples ratio was at 18-22 samples per day (with peak efficiency at 21 samples: 4.6 minutes). Cost of reagents and disposables was Euro (€) 1.06/sample. Time accounted for €5.32/sample (technicians, nephrologist-biologist), with total direct cost of €6.38/sample. Conclusion. In a nephrology laboratory, microscopic urinalysis is a time-consuming, expensive test. Analysis of cost and modalities may be useful, in a time of budget constrains, to maintain a role for this precious semeiotic art.
KW - Costs
KW - Nephrological laboratory
KW - Urinalysis
KW - Urinary sediment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0036759812&partnerID=8YFLogxK
M3 - Article
SN - 1121-8428
VL - 15
SP - 575
EP - 579
JO - Journal of Nephrology
JF - Journal of Nephrology
IS - 5
ER -