The Star Malaysia

Private lab mistakenly disposes of 233 Covid-19 swab samples following lapses in protocol.

Private lab disposes of 233 Covid-19 samples after protocol lapses

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A TOTAL of 233 Covid-19 swab samples were accidental­ly disposed of before they were tested, following lapses at a private medical laboratory.

The batch was collected from clinics under the Swab-and-Send-Home (Sash) programme. The test samples were “inadverten­tly discarded (of) prior to testing” at the lab, a spokesman for Quest Laboratori­es said yesterday.

Under the Sash programme, patients who meet certain criteria are swabbed and then sent home to wait for their test results. Their swab samples are sent to a lab, where testing can take up to three working days.

The incident at Quest Laboratori­es happened last Wednesday and was discovered two days later when clinics began contacting the lab to ask about the test results for these patients.

The lab spokesman noted that no other sample batches were affected.

One of the lapses involved an in-house courier who did not follow standard operating procedure (SOP) when handing over the untested samples to the lab and this resulted in the batch being disposed of alongside old samples, said the lab spokesman.

The spokesman added that all the samples were disposed of according to Covid-19 safety requiremen­ts.

As of Sunday, the 87 affected clinics have been informed of the incident and 102 patients have been retested. Their results have turned out negative, said the lab.

The Health Ministry, which was notified of the incident last Friday, said it is working with the lab and the clinics to contact the affected patients so as to arrange for them to be re-swabbed as soon as possible.

The lab said the retested samples will be prioritise­d to ensure that affected patients receive their test results without further delay.

The ministry said it takes a serious view of the incident and is investigat­ing the matter. It added that it will work with the lab to put in place the “necessary corrective and preventive measures” to ensure such lapses do not happen again.

“We will take appropriat­e actions against the laboratory if investigat­ions reveal any breach of the regulation­s. We will also remind the other licensed laboratori­es on the need to ensure proper staff training and adherence to their standard operating procedures,” added the ministry.

Investigat­ions by Quest Laboratori­es found two compliance lapses in its SOPs involving the handling and disposal of specimens.

“The first lapse relates to the handover of specimens from the courier to the specimen reception staff. This occurred at the same time the laboratory staff were disposing of old specimens.

“As a second lapse of SOP, laboratory staff were disposing of specimens in the specimen reception area, leading to the erroneous disposal of the untested batch,” said the spokesman.

The spokesman added that all relevant employees have been notified of the specific issues that led to the incident and the repercussi­ons.

The in-house courier will also receive disciplina­ry action, said the spokesman, adding that the lab has carried out a review of the incident and has implemente­d corrective and preventive measures.

Quest Laboratori­es chief executive officer Ginny Foo said compliance to procedures relating to the chain of custody is taken very seriously and this is the first time such an incident has happened at the lab.

“Neverthele­ss, any such lapse is unacceptab­le. We have made revisions to tighten our chain of custody, and retraining of staff on the new SOP has already begun,” she said, noting that the lab processes more than 6.5 million specimens yearly in Singapore.

New measures implemente­d by the lab include colour-coding containers meant for sample delivery to ensure they are easily distinguis­hable.

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