Negligent identification of biopsy tissue

After two years of treatment for benign prostatic hyperplasia, a 55-year-old man came to a urologist’s office.

Presentation

After two years of finasteride therapy for benign prostatic hyperplasia, a 55-year-old man was referred to a urologist. The patient’s finasteride-therapy adjusted PSA was 9.4. His paternal family history was positive for prostate cancer. The results from a bone scan and liver function studies were normal. On exam, the urologist found a 2+ enlarged prostate and recommended a prostate ultrasound and biopsy.
 

Physician action

The urologist performed the biopsy and took a total of six specimens from the right and left base, mid-gland, and apex. He had also taken another biopsy from a different patient that same day. The specimens were labeled in the urologist’s office by his nurse and transported by courier to a pathology lab.

The defendant pathologist found prostatic adenocarcinoma, Gleason’s Score 5+4=9 in the specimens labeled with the patient’s information. The urologist referred the patient to a cancer hospital. There, the same pathology specimens were re-read as prostatic adenocarcinoma. A surgeon performed a non-nerve sparing radical retro-pubic prostatectomy and bilateral pelvis lymphadenectomy.

Following the procedure, the pathology report showed no pathologic evidence of cancer. Subsequent DNA testing indicated that the specimens from the patient’s biopsy did not match the DNA from his prostatectomy/lymphadenectomy. An investigation found that the tissue from which the defendant pathologist made his diagnosis of cancer actually came from the other patient biopsied by the urologist on the same day.


Allegations

Lawsuits were filed against the urologist, the pathologist, the surgeon, and the cancer hospital. The allegations against the defendant pathologist involved negligent identification of biopsy tissue and failure to have and use protocols to prevent mis-identification of biopsy specimens.


Legal implications

The two sets of prostate biopsies were switched, and the post-surgical DNA testing proved it. Important in the pathologist’s defense was that neither he nor his staff grossed in the two different prostate biopsies together. Rather, the two sets of specimens were separated by non-prostate biopsy specimen analysis in order to successfully prevent cross-contamination. The pathologist and his laboratory had policies in place to prevent two of the same tissue type samples from being prepared and labeled together.

The pathologist’s laboratory policies and procedures led to the dismissal of the pathologist from the lawsuit. The plaintiff’s urology expert testified that the biopsy tissue switch was in reasonable medical probability the result of inadequate office policies and procedures in the urologist’s office.

Disposition

The claims against the pathologist, the surgeon, and the cancer hospital were dismissed. The claim against the urologist was settled.
 

More on diagnostic errors.

Disclaimer

This closed claim study is based on an actual malpractice claim from Texas Medical Liability Trust. This case illustrates how action or inaction on the part of the physicians led to allegations of professional liability, and how risk management techniques may have either prevented the outcome or increased the physician’s defensibility. This study has been modified to protect the privacy of the physicians and the patient.

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