Abstract

The 3% paraformaldehyde (PFA) method is a simple technique for counting residual white blood cells (WBC) in leukocyte-depleted red blood cells (RBC). Preliminary data suggested that its sensitivity is at least equal to PCR and flow cytometry. We report the results of a multicenter study conducted by the BEST Working Party to determine precision and accuracy of the 3% PFA method. In the 7 participating laboratories, 5 sets of samples containing nominal concentrations of 200, 100, 50, and 10 WBC/ml were prepared by diluting whole blood into 'WBC-free' RBC. Ten milliliters of each sample were processed using the 3% PFA method, which is based on erythrocyte lysis and WBC concentration into 5% of the original sample volume; a Nageotte chamber is used to count concentrated WBC. The precision of the technique varied according to the nominal concentration, ranging from a CV of 12% at 200 WBC/ml to 57% at 10 WBC/ml. The technique measured fewer than the nominal WBC concentrations (mean of all laboratories, -12.4%); underestimation was probably due to cell loss during sample manipulation. Overall accuracy was however acceptable, because statistical considerations establish that the actual WBC concentration would unlikely exceed 2 times the estimated count. The 3% PFA method is suitable for the enumeration of residual WBC at concentrations > or = 50/ml. It represents a useful tool for evaluation of high performance filters by reference laboratories.

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