Why Specimen Integrity Fails Before It Ever Reaches the Lab

Every diagnostic result begins with a sample. A tube of blood, a swab, a tissue biopsy, a urine collection. By the time that sample reaches the analysing instrument inside a laboratory, it has passed through multiple hands, survived a journey of varying distance, and endured conditions that most clinicians never think about. And in a significant number of cases, something has already gone wrong.

Specimen integrity , the degree to which a biological sample accurately represents the patient’s
physiological state at the time of collection , is one of the most consequential and least discussed
variables in diagnostic medicine. When it fails, the consequences ripple outward quietly. A result is
rejected. A test is repeated. A clinician makes a decision based on data that no longer reflects reality.

The question worth asking is: where does it actually go wrong?

The Pre-Analytical Phase Carries the Most Risk

Laboratory professionals divide the diagnostic process into three phases: pre-analytical, analytical, and post-analytical. Of the three, the pre-analytical phase , everything that happens before the sample reaches the instrument , accounts for the overwhelming majority of diagnostic errors. Estimates in international literature place this figure at somewhere between 46% and 68% of all laboratory mistakes.

The analytical phase, by contrast, is tightly controlled. Modern laboratory instruments are calibrated, validated, and monitored continuously. Quality assurance programmes in accredited laboratories are rigorous. The science inside the lab has largely been solved. What happens outside the lab is a different
matter entirely

The pre-analytical phase encompasses patient preparation, sample collection, labelling, handling, storage, and transport. Each of these steps introduces variables that the laboratory has limited ability to control, and limited visibility over. A sample can arrive at a facility looking entirely normal on the outside while its cellular and chemical composition has already shifted in ways that will produce a misleading result.

Haemolysis: The Most Common and Costly Form of Degradation

Among the forms of specimen degradation that affect diagnostic accuracy, haemolysis is the most frequently encountered. It occurs when red blood cells rupture and release their intracellular contents, primarily haemoglobin, potassium, and lactate dehydrogenase, into the surrounding serum or plasma. The result is a sample that appears visibly pink or red, and one that will produce falsely elevated readings for a range of analytes including potassium, magnesium, aspartate aminotransferase, and lactate
dehydrogenase

Haemolysis has several causes. Difficult venepuncture , where a needle is moved during collection or excessive suction is applied , can mechanically damage red cells at the point of draw. Collecting into an incorrect tube, mixing a sample too vigorously, or drawing through a small-gauge cannula can all contribute. But so can what happens after the sample leaves the patient.
Exposure to temperature extremes during transport is a well-documented cause of haemolysis. Blood specimens exposed to heat , even briefly ,begin to degrade. Cold shock from over-refrigeration can produce a similar effect. Excessive vibration during transit, particularly over long distances or poor road surfaces, places mechanical stress on red blood cells that their membranes were not designed to withstand. This is where the journey between the clinic and the laboratory becomes clinically relevant.

Temperature Excursions and What They Do to a Sample

Different specimen types have different thermal tolerances, and managing these tolerances during transport requires deliberate design, not improvisation. Whole blood collected for haematological analysis is generally stable at room temperature for a limited window, typically four to six hours for most parameters, with platelet counts becoming unreliable sooner. Coagulation specimens , citrate tubes used for PT, APTT, and fibrinogen , are particularly sensitive and should neither be refrigerated nor exposed to
heat.

Samples for blood gas analysis begin to change composition almost immediately as cellular metabolism continues inside the tube, consuming oxygen and producing carbon dioxide, which alters pH and pO2 readings progressively. Urine, microbiology swabs, and CSF samples each carry their own requirements. Midstream urine for culture and sensitivity should reach the laboratory within two hours of collection at ambient temperature, or within 24 hours if refrigerated at 2-8 degrees Celsius.

When specimens are transported in conditions that fall outside their required parameters , in an unmonitored vehicle, in a bag left on a car seat in summer heat, or in a cooler box packed without validated temperature confirmation, what arrives at the laboratory may be chemically and biologically different from what left the patient.

Time: The Variable Everyone Underestimates

Beyond temperature, time is the other great enemy of specimen integrity. The stability window for most biological materials is finite, and it begins the moment the sample is collected. For certain analytes, the margin is narrow. Ammonia increases rapidly in whole blood as amino acids continue to deaminate after collection. Glucose falls as red blood cells continue to metabolise it. Cortisol and other hormones can shift depending on storage time and conditions.

This means that every minute between collection and analysis has clinical weight. A specimen collected at 08:00 that arrives at a laboratory at 14:00 , because a collection round was delayed, because a courier was unavailable, because no one had a system for prioritising pickups, has lost ground it cannot recover. Laboratories operating in high-volume environments like Johannesburg depend on predictable,timely transport not as a logistical preference, but as a clinical necessity.

The Chain of Custody Gap

There is another dimension to specimen integrity that sits alongside the physical one: the documentary record. Chain of custody refers to the chronological trail that accounts for a specimen’s possession, location, and condition from collection to result. In medico-legal cases, this trail is legally required. In clinical diagnostics more broadly, it is a quality indicator, one that allows a laboratory to reconstruct what
happened to a sample if a result is questioned or a rejection is disputed.

Gaps in this record create real problems. If a specimen arrives degraded and there is no timestamp for pickup, no temperature log from transit, and no documented handover at collection, the laboratory cannot determine where the failure occurred. The clinician cannot be given a meaningful explanation. And the patient, who may be waiting on a result that drives a treatment decision , remains in diagnostic limbo. An unbroken chain of custody, timestamped at every handover and supported by a GPS route record, turns a logistical process into an accountable clinical one.

What the Laboratory Sees That the Clinic Doesn't

When a specimen arrives at a laboratory, it undergoes visual inspection before it reaches an instrument. Technicians assess for haemolysis, lipaemia, and icterus. They check for clotting in tubes that should be free of clots. They verify labelling, volume adequacy, and tube type. Rejection rates, the proportion of received specimens that cannot be processed as submitted, vary between facilities, but rates above 1-2% are considered indicative of upstream problems.

High rejection rates cost laboratories time. They cost clinicians turnaround time. They cost patients the clarity they came to the healthcare system to find. Most of those upstream problems are not analytical. They are pre-analytical. And a meaningful portion of them are transport-related, not collection-related.

The Courier as a Clinical Variable

Medical logistics is not a neutral activity. The vehicle, the container, the driver’s knowledge of specimen handling requirements, the route plan, the pickup time , each of these is a variable that either protects or compromises the sample in transit. Healthcare facilities that treat medical transport as a commodity often absorb the consequences invisibly: slightly elevated rejection rates, the occasional repeated test, a result that looked unusual but was accepted because no one connected it to a transport event.
Designing a transport process that actively preserves specimen integrity , with appropriate containers, monitored temperatures, trained handlers, predictable timing, and documented chain of custody , is not an operational luxury. For any facility where diagnostic accuracy matters, it is a clinical responsibility.

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