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Quality Control Spirometry & Lung Volumes
Gregg L. Ruppel, MEd, RRT, RPFT, FAARC Adjunct Professor, Pulmonary, Critical Care & Sleep Medicine Director, Pulmonary Function Laboratory St. Louis University Hospital
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What Quality Control Is
NOT !!
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What Quality Control Is
“Quality control (QC) is a procedure or set of procedures intended to ensure that a manufactured product or performed service adheres to a defined set of quality criteria or meets the requirements of the client or customer. QC is similar to, but not identical with, quality assurance (QA).” IT Department Johns Hopkins University
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Calibration vs. Quality Control
Calibration adjusts the output of an instrument (spirometer, gas analyzer) to match a known input Quality control tests an instrument to verify that the output is accurate and/or precise
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Spirometry Quality Spirometry Spirometer Methods meets ATS/ERS
recommendations calibration patient coaching software environmental factors open vs. closed Q/C Spirometry Acceptability Repeatability disease state supervision training & competency cooperation & effort age feedback language motivation Patients Technologist
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Accuracy and Precision
2.70 3.00 3.30 Mean 3.00 2.70 2.68 2.73 Mean 2.70 3.00 Accurate, but not very precise Precise, but not very accurate
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Spirometry QC* Test How Often What To Do Volume Daily
Calibration check using 3 L syringe Leak (volume spirometers) 3 cmH2O for 1 minute (< 30 ml volume loss) Volume linearity Quarterly 1 L volumes over entire range of device Flow linearity Weekly 3 flow ranges Timer Stopwatch Software Whenever changed Log and check biologic control * ATS/ERS 2005
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Calibration/Verification Syringes
3 Liter recommended ± 15 ml or 0.5% full scale 3.5% for spirometer calibration checks Keep syringe at same conditions as spirometer ‘Computerized’ syringes
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Syringe Calibration Calibrating the Calibrator
Annual calibration of syringe recommended
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Calibration Check – Volume Spirometers
Daily leak check Volume within ±3.5% of 3 L (2.895 – 3.105) Quarterly linearity check across volume range
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Calibration Check – Volume Spirometers
Is ± 3.5% good enough? * * McCormack et al. Chest 2007; 131:
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Calibration Check – Flow Spirometers
Volume within ±3.5% of 3 L (2.895 – 3.105) 3 Flows between 0.5 – 12 L/sec (inject volume between 6 seconds and 0.5 seconds) Weekly linearity (high, medium, low flows) Disposable flow sensors – check 1 at least daily
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Calibration Check – Flow Spirometers
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Calibration Check – Flow Spirometers
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Other QC Techniques Syringe flow-volume loops (simulate patient)
Biologic control (normal subject)
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Body Plethysmograph QC
Flow transducer accuracy same as for spirometry Box pressure and mouth pressure transducers calibrated (physical) daily Isothermal lung analog (± 50 ml or 3%) Biologic controls (2 subjects monthly or when problems are suspected)
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Physical Calibration Body Box
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Isothermal Lung Analog
Subject sits in box with jar (holds breath) Compress hand bulb at Hz Record VTG tangent Calculate ‘FRC’ of jar ATPS Volume of jar = volume of water + connectors – metal wool
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Biologic Controls for Plethysmography
Lung Volumes – Biologic Control Liters VTG TLCPLETH 2 subjects representative of patient population Perform VTG according to standard guidelines FRC and TLC should be within 10% of mean for each control
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N2 Washout Lung Volume QC
Flow or volume transducer meets standards for spirometry N2 analyzer zeroed with 100% O2; spanned with air (78.1 ± 0.5%) Linearity check every 6 months with certified gas or dilution technique (0.5% of expected) Adjustable large volume syringe (3 L) may be used to simulate patient maneuver Biologic controls (monthly)
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N2 Washout QC 3 Liter syringe
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He Dilution Lung Volume QC
Check for leaks every 24 hours or after circuit changes Check water level if necessary Check gas conditioning columns (CO2, water) Check function of fan or blower He analyzer stable; drift < 0.02% for 10 minutes He analyzer linearity using serial dilutions - check quarterly
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He Dilution QC Linearity Check
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Lung Volumes QC Biologic* Control Mean 3.38 3.42 3.57
He N2 Box Mean std cv 4.5% 5.7% 4.3% N * Looks good on your resume
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Selecting Biologic Controls
No history of respiratory disease (asthma) No symptoms Non-smoker (< 5 pk-yrs and 10 years quit) Readily available for testing
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Handling Control Data
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Biologic Control Data
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Request “Generic Biocontrols” from
Free Spreadsheet ! Request “Generic Biocontrols” from
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Biologic Control Data http://www.ezyqc.co.nz
Disclosure: I received a free copy of the software as a beta tester
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Biologic Control Data
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Thanks ! Gregg Ruppel Pulmonary Function Lab
St. Louis University Hospital
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