2019
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2019-131662
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Aspicular Bone Marrow Aspiration: A Common, but Not a Minor Problem

Abstract: Bone marrow (BM) aspiration plays an important role in hematologic malignancies diagnosis. Access and cost of diagnostic flow cytometry remains a problem in low and middle-income countries. In this context, morphological diagnosis by BM smear often represents the only means to rapidly diagnose our patients. Therefore, in this context obtaining the highest quality sample possible during the procedure is paramount. Despite being a well-known problem, evidence-based recommendations to improve BM aspirate quality … Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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“…In these studies, BM cells were aspirated from patients with various diseases, without focusing on MDS, at a single hospital (or a hospital group in one study), and it was reported that approximately 20%-30% of the aspirated BM samples were massively haemodiluted. [11][12][13] Here, we report the first study to examine the incidence of massive haemodilution in nationwide BM samples aspirated from patients who were diagnosed with or suspected of having MDS in Japan.…”
Section: O R I G I N a L P A P E R H A E M A T O L O G I C A L M A L ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In these studies, BM cells were aspirated from patients with various diseases, without focusing on MDS, at a single hospital (or a hospital group in one study), and it was reported that approximately 20%-30% of the aspirated BM samples were massively haemodiluted. [11][12][13] Here, we report the first study to examine the incidence of massive haemodilution in nationwide BM samples aspirated from patients who were diagnosed with or suspected of having MDS in Japan.…”
Section: O R I G I N a L P A P E R H A E M A T O L O G I C A L M A L ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Evaluating the adequacy of aspirates, as indicated by the presence of bony spicules, is crucial to ensure the procedural success and collection of relevant diagnostic material. Unfortunately, 8-50 percent of aspirations face challenges, including operator technique issues, hemodilution, or underlying pathologies, leading to unsuccessful outcomes [3]. The manual and error-prone nature of the process presents an opportunity to enhance patient outcomes through real-time and automated feedback on sample quality.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%