All specimens must be labelled according to the pathology labelling standards. Specimens that are not fully labelled will not be reported. Please refer to the Specimen Labelling Policy for further details.
Pathology Specimen Labelling Policy
If the labelling of a request form or specimen does not meet minimum labelling standards, and it is not possible to provide a repeat specimen, the requesting clinician will be asked to sign a declaration form. This form details the labelling deficiencies and places responsibility upon the clinician for clinical decisions based upon the results.
Inadequately Labelled Specimen Declaration Form
High Risk Specimens
To comply with national Health and Safety guidance and to alert laboratory staff that a specimen may require processing differently, some specimens must be labelled as ‘High Risk’ (Danger of Infection).
Clinical judgement must be used to label specimens correctly, and the onus for this is on the requestor.
Specimens from the following require “Danger of Infection” labelling:
- Patients with proven infection with a Hazard Group 3 (HG3) pathogen eg: hepatitis B and C, HIV, tuberculosis and other mycobacteria, typhoid, brucella and anthrax
- Patients suspected of having a HG3 pathogen (information from clinical history and examination e.g. injecting drug user, haemophiliac, vCJD)
- Patients who are a part of an ongoing outbreak caused by a HG3 pathogen.
- Inmates of Her Majesties’ Prisons
Important Warning
On no account should specimens be taken from patients suspected of having any pathogen in Hazard Group 4, e.g. viral haemorrhagic fever (Lassa, Marburg, Ebola and Congo-Crimean), or Hendra or Nipah viruses without prior consultation with the on-call medical microbiologist / virologist.
Handling “Danger of Infection” Specimens
- “Danger of Infection” labels should have black print on a yellow background, and should be self-adhesive.
- A label must be placed on the high-risk specimen container and its request form, which must give sufficient clinical information to enable the receiving laboratory staff to know what special precautions are necessary in the laboratory. The request form may be folded so that the information need not be conspicuous to other people, but the “Danger of Infection” label must be clearly visible.
- The specimen container must be placed in an individual transparent plastic bag, which should then be sealed. High Risk specimens must not be transported to the laboratory via the air tube.
For further information please refer to:
Trust’s Infection Prevention and Control PolicySpecial Instructions
Tissue Collection
10% Formal Saline is the routine fixative used for all histopathology specimens. The volume of fixative must be appropriate to the size of the sample.
The exceptions to fixed tissue are:
High Risk Specimens Requiring Frozen Sections
For further information on how to arrange frozen sections including high-risk specimens please refer to the guide below:
Guide for Arranging Frozen Sections including High-risk Specimens
Cellular Pathology Request Forms
Breast Surgery Histopathology Request Form
Breast Clinic Histopathology Cytology Request Form
Histopathology/Cytology Request Form