CONTROL MATERIAL AND METHODS FOR CELL ANALYZERS
20220050095 · 2022-02-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
This disclosure relates to verifying the operation of cell analyzers, including microscope-based cell imaging and counting analyzers. In one general aspect, a mixture of micro-beads having known characteristics is introduced into the analyzer. One or more images of the mixture are acquired with the analyzer's microscope, the images are analyzed, and a determination is made about whether results meet one or more predetermined quality control thresholds. Also disclosed is a hematology control material that can be used to perform the verification and includes a solvent, a dye dissolved in the solvent, and micro-beads suspended in the solvent. In another general aspect, a quality control method for the analyzers includes capturing images of samples that include patient cells using at least a microscope, extracting sample-specific information about properties of the patient samples from the images, and testing information from the samples against predetermined standards to verify the operation of the analyzer.
Claims
1-40. (canceled)
41. A method of verifying the operation of a cell analyzer having an automated microscope and image processing software for counting and analyzing cells and platelets in blood and which utilizes a test cartridge having a diluent/and or stain, the method comprising: a) introducing into the test cartridge a mixture of 1) a plurality of a first type of microbeads in a known amount of solution having a first known characteristic and a concentration that simulates a concentration of a first type of cells in blood and 2) a second plurality of micro-beads in a known amount of solution having a second known characteristic and concentration that simulates a concentration of a second type of cells in blood; b) interfacing the test cartridge with the cell analyzer; c) separating a known amount of the mixture of micro-beads from the remaining amount of the mixture of micro-beads in the test cartridge; d) mixing the known amount of the mixture of micro-beads in the test cartridge with an amount of diluent and/or stain that is sufficient to form a substantially uniform mixture of micro-beads and diluent and/or stain, wherein the micro-beads are suspended therein; e) transferring the entire mixture into the imaging chamber that is defined in the body of the test cartridge; f) capturing one or more digital images of the mixture in the imaging chamber that are selected to be statistically representative of the number and distribution of the first and second types of microbeads; g) counting all of the at least one type of micro-bead in the images using imaging processing software; h) obtaining a number of micro beads per unit volume of at least one type of micro-beads in the mixture; and i) comparing the number of micro-beads per unit volume of the one type of beads in the imaging chamber with the concentration of the one type of beads in solution.
42. The method of claim 41 wherein the mixture of beads is counted by image processing logic associated with the analyzer.
43. The method of claim 41 wherein the two types of micro-beads are counted separately by image processing logic associated with the analyzer according to their different characteristics.
44. The method of claim 41 wherein one type of micro-bead is a fluorescent micro-bead.
45. The method of claim 41 wherein the providing provides a mixture of micro-beads of different sizes.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN ILLUSTRATIVE EMBODIMENT
I. Analyzer Structure and Operation
[0039]
[0040] A valve driver 235 can be positioned to operate a rotary valve on the test cartridge. A vacuum/pressure pump 240 supplies negative or positive pressure to a manifold 245, which interfaces with the test cartridge 100 when it is placed in the cell analyzer as described below. The cell analyzer 200 further includes system controller 250 to control movement of the fluids in the test cartridge by activating the vacuum/pressure pump 240, moving the mechanical presser foot 230, or operating the valve driver 235 according to pre-programmed sequences. A monitoring camera 255, positioned to acquire digital images of the fluids in the cartridge, provides feedback for the system controller 250. A monitoring light source 256 may be a ring illuminator that surrounds the lens of the monitoring camera 255. Information from the monitoring camera 255 is used to provide feedback for controlling movement of liquids, for positioning the rotary valve, and for confirming critical steps, as discussed in more detail below.
[0041] In this embodiment, a single monitoring camera is provided in a position below the test cartridge, but one or more additional monitoring cameras can also be used. In another embodiment, for example, two monitoring cameras are included in the cell analyzer, with one positioned below the test cartridge position facing upward, and another positioned above test cartridge facing downward. These are both provided with lower magnification than the analyzer's microscope so they can monitor larger areas.
[0042] Also shown in
[0043] Turning our attention to
[0044] If the pass-through conduit 413 is correctly filled the diluent/reagent channel is primed at box 540 as described above with reference to
[0045] Once a sufficient volume of diluent/reagent is transferred, rotary valve 415 is positioned as shown in
[0046] If test cartridge 400 is used, it is inserted into cell analyzer 200 and analysis begins at step 560. Analysis of test cartridge 401 or 402 continues at step 560 when the x-y stage 225 moves the test cartridge 401 to obtain bright-field and fluorescent images of the entire imaging chamber 403 at box 560. In an alternate embodiment, objective lens 265 and/or digital camera 280 are moved and test cartridge 401 remains stationary. In yet another embodiment objective lens 265 has sufficient field of view to capture the entire imaging chamber 403 without movement. Two digital images of each physical frame of the imaging chamber are transferred to image processor/computer 290 at box 565. One image, taken with bright-field optics, can be compared to the other image taken with fluorescent optics to identify red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets. Further analysis of the white cell sizes and internal structure can identify sub-types of white cells using pattern recognition.
[0047] At box 570 comparison of the bright-field and fluorescent images can differentiate mature red cells from reticulocytes and nucleated red blood cells. By dividing each cell count by the known volume of the metering chamber 483, the concentration (cells per unit volume) can be determined. By using a sphering agent the planar sizes of red cells can be transformed into mean corpuscular volume (MCV). Combining the red blood cell count with MCV and the volume of the metering chamber 483 allows the calculation of hematocrit (HCT) and red cell distribution width (RDW). Further calculations using the separately measured HGB from box 525, combined with the RBC count gives mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH), and mean corpuscular hemoglobin content (MCHC).
[0048] At box 575 the measured results are compared with previously defined limits and ranges for the particular patient population and determination is made whether the results are within or outside normal expected ranges. According to this determination results within normal ranges are reported in box 580 and results that are outside the normal ranges are reported in box 585. As will be discussed in more detail below, the cell analyzer 200 can also perform a variety of other quality control and calibration operations to ensure the accuracy of its results using the microscope and/or the monitoring camera(s).
II. Control Material
[0049] Referring to
[0050] Referring to
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Ref. Name Analog Size Shape BF color FL color 632 Red Blood Cells RBC 5 μm round none none 634 Nucleated Red NRBC 5 μm round none green Blood Cells 636 Reticulocyte RET 5 μm round none red 620 Neutrophil NEU 7 μm round none orange 622 Lymphocyte LYM 7 μm round none green 624 Monocyte MON 10 μm round none green 626 Eosinophil EOS 7.25 μm raisin none green 628 Basophil BAS 7 μm round red none 630 Immature Cell IC 10 μm round none orange 638 Platelet PLT 3 μm round none green
[0051] The beads in the surrogate control material presented above can be selected in such a way as to simulate a normal whole blood sample. But they can also be selected in ways that simulate conditions that simulate an abnormal whole blood sample. In one embodiment, the control material is supplied in several lots with different count levels, including one normal count, one low abnormal count, and one high abnormal count.
III. Calibration
[0052] Because the surrogate control material can be designed with a known concentration of beads, a count of these beads acts as a standard that can be used to derive one or more calibration values for the instrument and/or cartridge. These values can be used to adjust one or more aspects of measurements to be made on actual blood samples. One example of a count-based calibration value is a calibration factor that can adjust for the actual metered volume of a sample. If actual metered volumes are 5% smaller than expected, for example, count results can be multiplied by a corresponding factor to adjust for the discrepancy. Other aspects of the measurement can also be adjusted for using factors, offsets, and/or other adjustment formulas. The dye 602 can be used in calibration operations, as well, such as to allow the analyzer to derive calibration values for photometric measurements. Bead color and shape can also be used as known properties in deriving calibration values for the optics or the camera.
[0053] Referring to
IV. Ongoing Quality Control Operations
[0054] The cell analyzer 200 can perform ongoing operations to improve a variety of aspects of its operation, including the accuracy, precision, and reliability of its measurements. As noted above, these operations can include performing calibration operations on a regular basis. They can also include ongoing monitoring of a variety of aspects of the analyzer's operation.
[0055] Referring to
[0056] Referring to
[0057] Mean fluorescent intensity of cells can be monitored, for example, by comparing the detected fluorescence level to a pre-determined acceptable level to detect potential defects in fluorescence measurements, such as damage to the stain reagent or non-uniform staining.
[0058] Referring to
V. Discussion
[0059] Traditional CBC analyzers typically must be calibrated for white blood cell count (WBC), red blood cell count (RBC), hemoglobin (Hgb), platelet count (Plt), mean cell volume (MCV), and mean platelet volume (MPV). All of these parameters are derived from the impedance part of the analyzer. There is generally no calibration for the flow cytometer, since it is typically only used to determine relative percentages, but not absolute counts. However, if absolute counts are determined by the flow cytometer rather than using an impedance counter, then the flow cytometer should be calibrated. Traditional CBC analyzers are typically calibrated every six months, or when there has been a critical part replacement, or if the quality control checks identify that the system is inaccurate. The calibrators are similar in composition to stabilized blood controls, although they typically have an even shorter shelf life and open-container use life. Traditional CBC analyzers are checked for calibration, because protein or salt buildup and cellular debris can cause shifts in size measurements (MCV, MPV) and in absorbance for the hemoglobin photometer (Hgb), and because changes to flow rates or dilution ratios can cause changes to the absolute count results (WBC, RBC, and Plt).
[0060] As discussed above, the use of stabilized blood is a compromise to provide a method of performing quality control. For years, this has worked quite well for impedance and flow cytometry technologies, but it is not optimal for other technologies, such as microscopy.
[0061] Microscopy-based cell imaging and counting systems are subject to different calibration needs than traditional CBC systems. Where an imaging system comprises an analyzer and a single-use test cartridge, the system can be factory calibrated and not require regular calibration. The use of a single-use test cartridge eliminates the possibility of carryover, blockages, or protein buildup. The absolute count parameters—WBC, RBC, and Plt—are determined by the sample volume in the single-use disposable test cartridge metering valve. The cell sizing parameters—MCV and MPV—are measured and determined by the lenses and the pixel size of the camera, neither of which will generally change over time. The hemoglobin photometer is calibrated at the factory and is not usually at risk of drift because it maintains a dry interface with the disposable test cartridge. The photometer can be calibrated using a dye or film with a known absorbance value at the measurement wavelength(s) used for the hemoglobin measurement. The depth of the hemoglobin chamber in the cartridge is also a determining factor in the Hgb result, which is controlled in the manufacturing process. The same holds true with the with the test cartridge metering valve volume.
[0062] Traditional CBC analyzers use control material for all of the measured parameters. Table 2 lists common error modes of traditional CBC analyzers and how a stabilized blood control is used to help mitigate the error. This is not an exhaustive list, but it does show the need for a control material with absolute counts, sizing parameters, and WBC differential in order to verify that traditional CBC systems are in good working condition.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Common errors in traditional hematology analyzers and control methods to identify them. Error Mode Cause(s) QC Verification blood cells settle operator fails to mix accuracy of RBC, WBC, plt sample tube blood sampling and fluidics, metering accuracy of RBC, WBC, plt metering mechanism dilution ratio fluidics accuracy of RBC, WBC, plt RBC sphering reagent integrity, accuracy of RBC, MCV fluidics RBC lysing reagent integrity, accuracy of WBC, Hgb fluidics Hgb reagent reagent integrity, accuracy of Hgb (species conversion) fluidics Hgb calibration fluidics, cleanliness of accuracy of Hgb Hgb chamber cell size calibration fluidics, cleanliness of accuracy of MCV, MPV counting chambers cell count fluidics, cleanliness of accuracy of RBC, WBC, plt calibration counting chambers WBC differential fluidics, cleanliness of accuracy of 3-part WBC (impedance) counting chambers, Diff (GRN %, LYM %, partial block MON %) WBC differential fluidics, cleanliness of accuracy of 5-part WBC (flow cytometry) flow cytometer, partial Diff (NEU %, LYM %, block MON %, EOS %, BAS %)
[0063] Proposed is a combination of a surrogate blood control and a system of internal software checks that can be utilized to ensure accurate performance of microscopy-based cell imaging and counting systems. The quality control material is supplied in three levels, similar to those that would be used with blood-based controls. The material consists of a dye and beads of various sizes, shapes, and/or colors. The dye or plurality of dyes is chosen such that the concentration and absorbance simulates whole blood at least at one wavelength of light. The beads may be silica, polystyrene, or other polymer in composition. The sizes of the beads are typically in the range of 1-20 micrometers to simulate the size of platelets, red blood cells, reticulocytes, and the different white blood cells. Some or all of the beads may fluoresce to simulate WBCs, platelets, or reticulocytes. The beads may be varied in shape and/or color to simulate a white cell differential to be reported.
[0064] When used in conjunction with a single-use test cartridge, a drop of quality control material is deposited by the user into a test cartridge in the same way that a patient sample is deposited. No special quality control test cartridge is required. The quality control material is analyzed in the cartridge with the same process as a patient sample.
[0065] When the image-based system does not use a single-use cartridge, or if the test cartridge does not contain all of the fluidics needed for the test, the analyzer can aspirate the QC sample, in the same way that it aspirates a whole blood sample. The use of a surrogate control material can be particularly useful in systems, where the fluidics are part of an analyzer.
[0066] Table 3 is a list of the error modes that could arise in performing a CBC test. Two methodologies are presented: one using a whole blood control (if one existed that could meet the need for microscopy) and the other using the new control comprising of a daily surrogate control material and internal software quality controls. The use of software controls on every sample is particularly important for single-use test devices.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Failure modes on a Microscopy-Based Cell Imaging and Counting System with a single-use test cartridge and how surrogate controls and software controls are used to identify errors. Whole Blood Control New Control Error Mode Cause(s) Methodology Methodology blood cells settle operator fails to if not mixed, cells if not mixed, beads settle in mix sample tube settle in tube tube blood cells settle operator fails to cells settle in sample beads settle in sample input start test within 1 input minute blood sample consumable failure accuracy of measured accuracy of measured metering absolute counts of absolute counts of beads cells metering pneumatics failure accuracy of measured accuracy of measured diluent/stain absolute counts of absolute counts of beads cells mixing blood consumable failure cell distribution bead distribution and diluent transfer of mixed pneumatics failure cell distribution bead distribution sample to imaging region homogeneity of pneumatics failure cell distribution bead distribution sample in imaging region WBC count reagent integrity, cells fluoresce and beads fluoresce and can be consumable failure can be counted counted WBC differential reagent integrity, WBC sub- monitor mean fluorescence consumable failure populations stain on every sample differently, creating a differential RBC count reagent integrity, cells are counted in beads are counted in consumable failure bright-field bright-field MCV reagent integrity RBC are sphered and monitor cell sphering on measurement measured every sample, measure size of beads platelet counting reagent integrity, platelets fluoresce beads fluoresce and can be consumable failure and can be counted counted hemoglobin reagent integrity, reagent-free, reagent-free, measured on measurement consumable failure measured on dye of control hemoglobin of control
[0067] Traditional CBC analyzers generally use stabilized whole blood control materials to perform a QC check on the white cell differential. For a three-part differential using impedancemetry, any drift or partial clog in the impedance channel could cause erroneous results in the three part differential. Similarly for flow cytometers, a partial occlusion in the injector nozzle to the flow cell can cause the stream of cells to be off center, thus causing erroneous results in the five-part differential. to be In a system that does not have fluidics or possible mechanical failures, the primary cause for a failed WBC differential would be a failure of the stain reagent. Monitoring the mean fluorescence on every sample can identify a problem with reagent or stain integrity on every cartridge. This is preferable to using quality control material to perform a QC check once per day.
[0068] The control material can also be used to check operator proficiency. Before a blood sample is run on a CBC analyzer, it should be properly mixed by the operator. If the operator fails to mix the blood sample, the analyzer could generate an erroneous result. QC material can be used to verify operator proficiency in mixing of the blood sample, as the beads will settle in the same manner that blood cells settle, and generate an erroneous result.
[0069] A set of internal process and system controls that are performed on every sample using quality control cameras can be used to further control cell imaging and counting systems. The cameras ensure that every part of sample preparation is performed correctly for every test. Table 4 details the procedural controls.
[0070] All operational steps—including sample metering, dilution, analysis, and analyzer self-checks are handled and controlled automatically within the device, without the need for user intervention. The analyzer performs self-checks during initialization to ensure that the system is working properly. These self-checks include the processors, the cameras, the safety interlocks, the microscope stage, and the diluter mechanism.
[0071] The single-use test cartridges are managed through barcode intelligence. Embedded within the barcodes are the lot number, the expiration date, and the serialization for each cartridge. When the cartridge is inserted, the analyzer reads the barcode automatically, eliminating the possibility of using an invalid cartridge, using an expired cartridge, or using a test cartridge more than once. Intelligence can also be managed by use of RFID tags, 1-Wire, iButton, EEPROM, or similar devices.
[0072] The system uses one or more quality control cameras for comprehensive monitoring of all sample processing steps. In the example of using two cameras, one quality control camera is used to verify that the metered blood sample is free from bubbles and that the metering process is accurate, without any loss of sample. This ensures that the metered volume of blood in every sample is accurate. This same quality control camera ensures that the entire sample from the mixing chamber has been emptied into the imaging chamber at the completion of the dilution step. The second quality control camera views the entire imaging chamber of the cartridge. This allows for the verification of the dilution integrity. If there are any bubbles or voids in the channel, the software automatically masks these sections and removes them from the calculation. The combination of these two cameras ensures that the metering and dilution on every cartridge is completely controlled and verified.
[0073] A third camera is part of the microscope and is used for analyzing the images of the cells at 20× magnification. In addition to the cell counting, sizing, and classification, this camera also verifies sample integrity at a microscopic level. For example, the software checks the images for clots and microbubbles and for overlapping cells. If the camera detects a problem with sample integrity, the analyzer will reject the sample. A different magnification could be used to analyze the quality of the cells and the fluid matrix.
TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Procedural failure modes on the Microscopy-based Cell Imaging and Counting System and internal software checks are implemented as verification or cause for rejection. Error Mode Software Process Control insufficient blood sample QC camera verification, reject air bubbles in blood sample QC camera verification, reject test slide loading mechanical design for fail-safe insertion of the test slide metering blood sample QC camera verification metering diluent/stain controlled by edge detectors, QC camera verification washout of valve QC camera verification mixing blood and diluent cell distribution, QC camera verification transfer of mixed sample to imaging cell distribution, QC camera region verification homogeneity of sample in imaging cell distribution, QC camera region verification determine percent sampling of the use QC camera to verify area whole voids or bubbles in the imaging use QC camera to adjust area chamber clots or microbubble in the imaging use microscope camera to detect chamber overlapping cells use microscope camera to detect cartridge reuse or misuse unique barcoded serial # for each cartridge reagent quality stability tracking by barcode
[0074] Some or all of the various quality control and calibration tasks performed by the analyzer can be carried out using a specially programmed general purpose computer, dedicated hardware, or a combination of both. These can be incorporated into the analyzer as part of the system controller 250 and/or image processor/computer 290. Some or all of the control, image processing, calibration, and other functionality can also be provided through software and/or hardware logic provided by a standalone processing system located proximate the system. And parts of the functionality can even be provided from a remote location through a public or private communication network. In one embodiment, the system is based on stored software instructions running on a Microsoft Windows®-based computer system, but other platforms could be used as well, such as Android®-, Apple®-, Linux®-, or UNIX®-based platforms.
[0075] The present invention has now been described in connection with a number of specific embodiments thereof. However, numerous modifications which are contemplated as falling within the scope of the present invention should now be apparent to those skilled in the art. For example, while many of the techniques and materials described in this application are particularly well suited to use with microscopy-based analyzers, many of them may also be applied to quality control and calibration of traditional types of CBC analyzers. Therefore, it is intended that the scope of the present invention be limited only by the scope of the claims appended hereto. In addition, the order of presentation of the claims should not be construed to limit the scope of any particular term in the claims.