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"The first rule is that a robot may not allow ... a human
to come to harm."
Isaac Asimov (2)
A Two-Person Conversation in a Fugue State
GATES: What a great era: computers,
microchips, browsers, automation, and worldwide windows.
FEYNMAN: Don't forget quantum physics. Don't forget
rubber gaskets. Don't forget bongo drums.
GATES: Quantum physics helps us develop computer networks
but gaskets and bongo drums? This is difficult, very difficult, maybe
even macrodifficult to understand.
FEYNMAN: Inferior rubber gaskets and greed led to the
Challenger tragedy.
GATES: What's your point?
FEYNMAN: Untested technology, as sophisticated as it may
appear in planning, is still untested. Each system needs to be
validated. Human invention and intervention is needed to prime and
maintain progress.
GATES: We agree on something. A great idea, from whatever
source, is not useful until it is tested and validated. But bongo drums ...
FEYNMAN: Have some fun along the way.
The number of total
laboratory automation (TLA) installations is growing but TLA has only
begun to impact diagnostic immunology. I will use the terms integrated
laboratory automation, laboratory automation system, and TLA
interchangeably in this commentary. TLA is intended to be a system of
laboratory instruments under a unified control that requires little or
no human intervention at any stage of the process. The process may
include drawing blood, reporting the result, and discarding or saving
the sample.
Automation is old stuff in clinical laboratories: the speed, quality,
and diversity of instruments designed to perform testing on blood and
urine samples have continued to improve since the end of World War II.
These instruments first mimicked manual methods but later took
advantage of newer technologies. First clinical chemistry and then
hematology were impacted by these instruments, which allowed
laboratories to meet the large increase in testing demand without
adding greatly to the number of staff and costs. If anything, the cost
per test was reduced. But clinical laboratories remained cottage
industries with each section, such as chemistry, microbiology,
hematology, and immunology, doing its own thing and having its own
management and performance and quality rules. There was little
interdisciplinary cooperation (5).
Dr. Masahide Sasaki in Kochi, Japan, in the 1980s created the first and
a most dramatic example of an integrated and automated laboratory. Dr.
Sasaki used existing analytic instrumentation but rearranged their
physical positioning in the laboratory and developed conveyance and
robotic systems. He linked instrument stations with conveyor belts and
overhead tracks to move samples. Laboratory computers controlled all of
the activities. Dr. Sasaki was compelled to develop a highly automated
laboratory because he did not have an adequate personnel budget to
support a busy facility in a busy health care institution. The Kochi
laboratory requires only a fraction of the number of people needed to
do a similar number of tests in a typical clinical laboratory in the
United States.
Since Dr. Sasaki's innovative beginning, other laboratories have
installed total automation systems, usually in cooperation with the
manufacturer of such systems. There are currently about two dozen such
installations in Japan. Excluding commercial laboratories, there are
only a handful of TLA facilities in the United States and perhaps even
fewer in Europe (1).
The potential advantages of total automation are clear: decreased
personnel and operating costs, less human intervention and fewer
laboratory errors, more rapid processing of samples and recording of
results, increased safety, better control of the entire process, and
decreased need for laboratory space. The disadvantages are somewhat
more difficult to understand at this early stage of TLA development.
The obvious ones are costs and technology. The start-up costs for
laboratory automation are large. In the past, a "payback" period
for laboratory equipment of 2 to 3 years was viewed as adequate. The
pay-back period for TLA may be 5 to 7 years or more. Administrators are
concerned, and should be concerned, about obsolescence over that time
frame. The cost problem is related in part to technology. Laboratory
equipment manufacturers have each done their own thing in the past.
Thus, the computer codes, bar codes, electrical systems and event
status descriptors have varied from manufacturer to manufacturer and
even from product to product. TLA producers have exhibited the same
nonconformist behavior. Much of this individuality stems from the lack
of acceptable standards.
Over the past few years, there has been an accelerating effort to
develop such standards. In the spring of 1997, the National Committee
for Clinical Laboratory Standards (NCCLS) named five subcommittees to
tackle the contentious issue of automation standards. The NCCLS is
composed of three groups: government, industry, and academia. The
organization has a long history of developing standards for the
clinical laboratory through a well-tested and laborious consensus
process. In this case, the NCCLS asked for and received participation
from groups in Japan as well as Europe. The process of developing
standards is ongoing and the first documents will soon be released for
international review. The overall goal is to allow each site interested
in automation to "plug and play," that is, to be able to choose
instruments, conveyances, and centrifuges, etc., from a number of
different vendors with the assurance that all will match the overall
system (4). We are a long way from this goal.
What is the status of automation in the diagnostic immunology
laboratory? The composition of assays performed includes both automated
assays such as immunoglobulin quantitation by nephelometry and manual
tests such as antinuclear antibody (ANA) detection by indirect
immunofluorescence. In some sites, diagnostic immunology laboratories
also use immunological methods such as in hepatitis or thyroid function
determinations. Those tests that are already included on automated
laboratory instruments will be most easily integrated into a TLA
scheme. Indeed, some of the equipment manufacturers have developed
instrument modules or platforms connected by technology and/or clinical
use. These modules are the next logical stepping-stones for most
laboratories as they move towards complete automation.
Tests with automated read-outs, for example, enzyme-linked
immunosorbent assays (ELISA), have been semi-automated through the use
of robotic arms. Thus, these tests could also be put online with the
use of conveyances and robotics. Assays requiring human read-out, for
example, ANA detection by indirect immunofluorescence or protein
immunofixation, will be the last bastion from TLA. However, technology
is encroaching on even these determinations. For example, there is a
growing trend to replace the ANA immunofluorescence assay with an ANA
ELISA. Capillary electrophoresis and immunosubtraction might replace
immunofixation. Many tests are already automated within the diagnostic
immunology laboratory. As read-outs become more automated, these tests
will also be integrated into a laboratory automation system. The
decision to switch will be made on the basis of adequate quality and cost.
The reasons that diagnostic immunology is not more automated relate to
the lack of standardized assays and interpretations, the low volume of
such tests relative to those in other laboratory sections, and the high
risk/benefit ratio of investing in development. Many of the
determinations performed in the diagnostic immunology laboratory are
not easily automated. These obstacles to automation still exist. The
financial risks for reference laboratories that perform a growing
portion of diagnostic immunology assays are decreasing, and these
companies are more likely to invest in development. Improvements in
technology will allow more tests to be more readily automated. There
remain two major issues to consider in the movement towards TLA:
standardization and validation of assays.
Manufacturers, laboratorians, and regulatory agencies might cooperate
to develop standards or they could be mandated by federal or state
agencies. Of course, this is true not only for automated assays but
also for manual ones. Standardization already is a major concern in the
diagnostic immunology laboratory. Automation places emphasis on this problem.
As methods changes, the new automated assays must be validated against
the existing ones. This assumes that the existing tests already have a
sound scientific basis in regard to sensitivity, specificity,
predictive values, and clinical utility. We have already seen failures
by industry, laboratories, and government in releasing newer versions
of existing measurements without adequate documentation. Governmental
regulations are not stringent and fall far short of what is required to
ensure that new pharmaceutical products are properly validated
(3). Yet, drug use may be dependent on the result of an
inadequately validated assay! Unless there are legal or regulatory
changes, it will be incumbent on laboratories to validate each new
method, deciding what is a "positive" test result versus a
"negative" test result and the clinical relevance of the test
result. Otherwise, total laboratory automation will automatically
produce many inferior and misleading results. The manufacturers have a
major, probably the predominant, responsibility in this area.
TLA will be integrated into the diagnostic immunology laboratory in
some settings. These laboratories will eventually produce results more
efficiently and more economically. They will need fewer medical
technologists but more computer specialists and engineers. The total
number of employees will be greatly reduced. The development of TLA
will require vigilance by an informed and articulate group of
professionals who will accept the challenge of focusing on the public
well-being.