Difference between revisions of "L4E rule 1-3 (2014)"
Line 60: | Line 60: | ||
==Tutorial== | ==Tutorial== | ||
The following cases can be used to work through the above rules. | The following cases can be used to work through the above rules. | ||
{{hide3|1. Three cores of a neck lymph node. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 1}} | {{hide3|1. Three cores of a neck lymph node. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1}} | ||
{{hide3|2. Six cores of a mediastinal mass. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Rule 1}} | {{hide3|2. Six cores of a mediastinal mass. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1}} | ||
{{hide3|3. Two punch biopsies of BCC. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 1: each biopsy is 1 L3}} | {{hide3|3. Two punch biopsies of BCC. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1: each biopsy is 1 L3}} | ||
{{hide3|4. Two punch biopsies for an inflammatory skin lesion. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 1: biopsies for same purpose}} | {{hide3|4. Two punch biopsies for an inflammatory skin lesion. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1: biopsies for same purpose}} | ||
{{hide3|5. Colonic tubular adenoma negative for HGD. L4E?|Answer: 0.5 L4E<br>Rule 1}} | {{hide3|5. Colonic tubular adenoma negative for HGD. L4E?|Answer: 0.5 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1}} | ||
{{hide3|6. Colonic tubular adenoma with HGD. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 1: HGD make is worth more}} | {{hide3|6. Colonic tubular adenoma with HGD. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1: HGD make is worth more}} | ||
{{hide3|7. Colonic tubular adenoma negative for HGD and hyperplastic polyp in same container. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 1: 1 L3 for TA, 1 L3 for HP - together ~ 1 L4E}} | {{hide3|7. Colonic tubular adenoma negative for HGD and hyperplastic polyp in same container. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1: 1 L3 for TA, 1 L3 for HP - together ~ 1 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|8. Random colonic biopsies 15 frags. L4E?|Answer: 2.5 L4E<br>Rule 1: 15 frags x L3/3 frags ~ 5 L3, 5 L3 ~ 2.5 L4E}} | {{hide3|8. Random colonic biopsies 15 frags. L4E?|Answer: 2.5 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1: 15 frags x L3/3 frags ~ 5 L3, 5 L3 ~ 2.5 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|9. Random colonic biopsies 20 frags. L4E?|Answer: 3 L4E<br>Rule 1: 20 frags x L3/3 frags ~ 6.66 L3 -> truncated to 6 L3, 6 L3 ~ 3 L4E}} | {{hide3|9. Random colonic biopsies 20 frags. L4E?|Answer: 3 L4E<br>Why? Rule 1: 20 frags x L3/3 frags ~ 6.66 L3 -> truncated to 6 L3, 6 L3 ~ 3 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|10. Prostate biopsy with 12 cores. L4E?|Answer: 6 L4E<br>Rule 2: 12 cores x 1 L3/core ~ 12 L3; 12 L3 ~ 6 L4E}} | {{hide3|10. Prostate biopsy with 12 cores. L4E?|Answer: 6 L4E<br>Why? Rule 2: 12 cores x 1 L3/core ~ 12 L3; 12 L3 ~ 6 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|11. Breast biopsy with 2 cores. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 2: 2 cores x 1 L3/core ~ 2 L3; 2 L3 ~ 1 L4E}} | {{hide3|11. Breast biopsy with 2 cores. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 2: 2 cores x 1 L3/core ~ 2 L3; 2 L3 ~ 1 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|12. Endometrial biopsy in 2 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Rule 3: 1-3 blocks ~ 1 L4E}} | {{hide3|12. Endometrial biopsy in 2 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 1 L4E<br>Why? Rule 3: 1-3 blocks ~ 1 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|13. Benign TURP with 4 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Rule 3: 4-6 blocks ~ 2 L4E}} | {{hide3|13. Benign TURP with 4 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Why? Rule 3: 4-6 blocks ~ 2 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|14. Benign TURP with 6 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Rule 3: 4-6 blocks ~ 2 L4E}} | {{hide3|14. Benign TURP with 6 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Why? Rule 3: 4-6 blocks ~ 2 L4E}} | ||
{{hide3|15. Endometrial biopsy in 5 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Rule 3: 4-6 blocks ~ 2 L4E}} | {{hide3|15. Endometrial biopsy in 5 blocks. L4E?|Answer: 2 L4E<br>Why? Rule 3: 4-6 blocks ~ 2 L4E}} | ||
==See also== | ==See also== |
Revision as of 04:10, 26 October 2017
This article covers L4E rule 1, L4E rule 2, and L4E rule 3 for the 2014 L4E workload system. An overview of the L4E rules is found in the L4E rules of 2014.
You can test your knowledge in the L4E rules 1-3 quiz.
Context
- This rule covers most biopsies/curettages.
- Special biopsies (e.g. medical liver, transplant biopsies) are coded differently, see L4E article.
Details
Specimen type(s) | Weight (L4E) | Details | Examples | Rule |
---|---|---|---|---|
Complex skin biopsies and non-GI biopsies with countable fragments | 1 L4E / 5 tissue fragments (frags), all fractions are rounded down | 1-5 frags = 1 L4E, 6-10 frags = 2 L4E, 11-15 frags = 3 L4E, 16-20 frags = 4 L4E "complex skin" includes inflammatory skin, malignancies except BCC and SCC, atypical melanocytic lesions, adnexal tumours, lymphoid infiltrates |
inflammatory skin biopsy 3 frags = 1 L4E, adnexal skin tumour 6 frags = 2 L4E | Rule 1 [1] |
Simple skin (non-complex skin) | 0.5 L4E/biopsy (1 L3/biopsy) | biopsies > 2 cm - use L4E rule 4; includes BCC, SCC, actinic keratosis, intradermal nevus | punch biopsy of BCC = 0.5 L4E, shave biopsy of seborrheic keratosis = 0.5 L4E | Rule 1 [1] |
Medical GI biopsies | 1 L3/3 tissue fragments (frags), all fractions are rounded down; 1 L3 = 0.5 L4E | 1-3 frags = 0.5 L4E, 4-6 frags = 1 L4E, 7-9 frags = 1.5 L4E, 10-12 frags = 2 L4E, 13-15 frags = 2.5 L4E, 16-18 frags = 3 L4E, 19-21 frags = 3.5 L4E, 22-24 frags = 4 L4E | 6 frags colorectal biopsies = 1 L4E | Rule 1 [1] |
Surgical GI biopsies (neoplastic/pre-neoplastic) | 1 L3/lesion (if submitted in one block) and low grade; lesion with high-grade dysplasia = 1 L4E | lesions submitted in >1 block: use L4E rule 4 | 2 HP polyps in one block = 1 L4E, 1 tubular adenoma negative for HG dysplasia = 0.5 L4E | Rule 1 [1] |
Breast core biopsies & prostate core biopsies | 0.5 L4E/core (1 L3 per core) | maximum of 20 cores; should use clinicians core count (if available), if clinicians' count not available use gross count | 4 breast cores = 2 L4E 12 prostate cores = 6 L4E |
Rule 2 [1] |
Core biopsies (not including prostate, breast) | 1 L4E / 5 cores, all fractions are rounded down | 1-5 cores = 1 L4E, 6-10 cores = 2 L4E, 11-15 cores = 3 L4E, 16-20 cores = 4 L4E | 3 cores of lymph node = 1 L4E, 6 cores of mediastinal mass = 2 L4E | Rule 2 [1] |
Fragmented tissue/ curettage | 1 L4E / 3 blocks, all fractions are rounded down | 1-3 blocks = 1 L4E, 4-6 blocks = 2 L4E, 7-9 blocks = 3 L4E, 10-12 blocks = 4 L4E, 13-15 blocks = 5 L4E, 16-18 blocks = 6 L4E, 19-21 blocks = 7 L4E | endometrial biopsy in 2 blocks = 1 L4E, TURP in 7 blocks = 3 L4E, bladder biopsy in 12 blocks = 4 L4E | Rule 3 [1] |
Tutorial
The following cases can be used to work through the above rules.
1. Three cores of a neck lymph node. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
2. Six cores of a mediastinal mass. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 2 L4E |
3. Two punch biopsies of BCC. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
4. Two punch biopsies for an inflammatory skin lesion. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
5. Colonic tubular adenoma negative for HGD. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 0.5 L4E |
6. Colonic tubular adenoma with HGD. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
7. Colonic tubular adenoma negative for HGD and hyperplastic polyp in same container. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
8. Random colonic biopsies 15 frags. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 2.5 L4E |
9. Random colonic biopsies 20 frags. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 3 L4E |
10. Prostate biopsy with 12 cores. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 6 L4E |
11. Breast biopsy with 2 cores. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
12. Endometrial biopsy in 2 blocks. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 1 L4E |
13. Benign TURP with 4 blocks. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 2 L4E |
14. Benign TURP with 6 blocks. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 2 L4E |
15. Endometrial biopsy in 5 blocks. L4E?
|
---|
Answer: 2 L4E |