Greater Manchester has taken the next steps in its digitisation of pathology services, with the go-live of Sectra’s digital pathology solution at laboratories in Oldham and Salford.
Part of the Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, the laboratories collectively provide a wide range of general and specialist pathology services that support diagnoses for patients in the region. This includes one of the largest dermatology departments in the country and gynaecology services that cover six hospitals.
Pathologists and biomedical scientists at the Northern Care Alliance will now become the latest in Greater Manchester to begin the process of swapping microscopes for high-quality digital images. These will be seamlessly accessible through an enterprise imaging system, provided under an existing agreement in the region with medical imaging technology provider Sectra.
Digital pathology is the biggest thing in decades to happen in our laboratories, and will revolutionise how we work together across former organisational boundaries to deliver services for patients, and how our clinical teams collaborate.
In total, professionals in seven laboratories across the Greater Manchester Pathology Network are due to use the enterprise imaging system, with professionals at Stockport NHS Foundation Trust being the first to deploy the pathology module earlier in 2023. The same system is already in use in acute trusts across Greater Manchester, where it is used to view and analyse radiology imaging across the region’s imaging network.
Amanda Ogden, service manager for the cellular pathology and mortuary service at Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, said: “Digital pathology is the biggest thing in decades to happen in our laboratories and will revolutionise how we work together across former organisational boundaries to deliver services for patients and how our clinical teams collaborate. Digital is at the top of the agenda. There is strong buy-in from our consultants, who are excited by the possibilities for enhancing our diagnostics but also for research and new discoveries.
“This will support training and improve how we share expertise. If we have an interesting case, we will no longer need to package slides and send them through the post. Instead, people across sites will have immediate access to high-quality digital images. Modern ways of working will also help us to retain staff, from people starting their careers to people approaching retirement.”
Now images of slides will be instantly available at the click of a button to different professionals in different locations. It will mean that we can focus more of our time on quality control, ensuring that samples and stains are of the right quality before they go to be reported or discussed by pathology teams.
Historically, if a pathologist requires a second opinion, slides are sent to specialists in other hospitals to review and report. With the introduction of digital pathology, staff will have immediate access to digital images, regardless of their location. They will be able to share screens and talk through cases, learning from specialist expertise for future similar cases.
The move to digital pathology is expected to enhance multi-disciplinary team meetings and collaboration. Pathologists will be better able to work from where they need to. In some cases, this will mean that consultant pathologists will be able to work onsite with frontline clinical teams, whilst being able to collaborate with pathologists in other locations. In other circumstances, staff will be able to work from home – without the need to take slides away from the laboratory.
Matthew Goodwin, a biomedical scientist at Northern Care Alliance NHS Foundation Trust, said digital pathology would help to increase efficiency. “Until now we would spend significant amounts of time preparing slide trays for pathologists and multidisciplinary teams, sometimes finding that the slide isn’t available because it is being reviewed elsewhere,” he said.
“Now images of slides will be instantly available at the click of a button to different professionals in different locations. It will mean that we can focus more of our time on quality control, ensuring that samples and stains are of the right quality before they go to be reported or discussed by pathology teams. It will allow us to collaborate more effectively around an image on a screen, allowing us to more easily and accurately review each other’s work, and to more easily train the next generation of biomedical scientists.”
Jane Rendall, UK and Ireland managing director for Sectra, said: “This is the latest step in Greater Manchester’s vision to break down barriers for both patients and clinical teams. It means patients having greater access to the specialists who can inform the best quality of diagnosis. And it means a collaborative clinical environment – where people can learn quickly and contribute more to effective patient care. As someone who started my career in NHS imaging, it is extremely rewarding to see such progress being made in our diagnostic services.”