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Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?

OBJECTIVES: When laboratory Reference Ranges (RR) do not reflect analytical methodology, result interpretation can cause misclassification of patients and inappropriate management. This can be mitigated by determining and implementing method-specific RRs, which was the main objective of this study....

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Autores principales: Lee, Graham R., Griffin, Alison, Halton, Kieran, Fitzgibbon, Maria C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5633846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29034300
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plabm.2017.06.001
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author Lee, Graham R.
Griffin, Alison
Halton, Kieran
Fitzgibbon, Maria C.
author_facet Lee, Graham R.
Griffin, Alison
Halton, Kieran
Fitzgibbon, Maria C.
author_sort Lee, Graham R.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: When laboratory Reference Ranges (RR) do not reflect analytical methodology, result interpretation can cause misclassification of patients and inappropriate management. This can be mitigated by determining and implementing method-specific RRs, which was the main objective of this study. DESIGN AND METHODS: Serum was obtained from healthy volunteers (Male + Female, n > 120) attending hospital health-check sessions during June and July 2011. Pseudo-anonymised aliquots were stored (at − 70 °C) prior t° analysis on Abbott ARCHITECT c16000 chemistry and i2000SR immunoassay analysers. Data were stratified by gender where appropriate. Outliers were excluded statistically (Tukey method) to generate non-parametric RRs (2.5th + 97.5th percentiles). RRs were compared to those quoted by Abbott and UK Pathology Harmony (PH) where possible. For 7 selected tests, RRs were verified using a data mining approach. RESULTS: For chemistry tests (n = 23), Upper or Lower Reference Limits (LRL or URL) were > 20% different from Abbott ranges in 25% of tests (11% from PH ranges) but in 38% for immunoassay tests (n = 13). RRs (mmol/L) for sodium (138−144), potassium (3.8–4.9) and chloride (102−110) were considerably narrower than PH ranges (133–146, 3.5–5.0 and 95–108, respectively). The gender difference for ferritin (M: 29–441, F: 8–193 ng/mL) was more pronounced than reported by Abbott (M: 22–275, F: 5–204 ng/mL). Verification studies showed good agreement for chemistry tests (mean [SD] difference = 0.4% [1.2%]) but less so for immunoassay tests (27% [29%]), particularly for TSH (LRL). CONCLUSION: Where resource permits, we advocate using method-specific RRs in preference to other sources, particularly where method bias and lack of standardisation limits RR transferability and harmonisation.
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spelling pubmed-56338462017-10-13 Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome? Lee, Graham R. Griffin, Alison Halton, Kieran Fitzgibbon, Maria C. Pract Lab Med Article OBJECTIVES: When laboratory Reference Ranges (RR) do not reflect analytical methodology, result interpretation can cause misclassification of patients and inappropriate management. This can be mitigated by determining and implementing method-specific RRs, which was the main objective of this study. DESIGN AND METHODS: Serum was obtained from healthy volunteers (Male + Female, n > 120) attending hospital health-check sessions during June and July 2011. Pseudo-anonymised aliquots were stored (at − 70 °C) prior t° analysis on Abbott ARCHITECT c16000 chemistry and i2000SR immunoassay analysers. Data were stratified by gender where appropriate. Outliers were excluded statistically (Tukey method) to generate non-parametric RRs (2.5th + 97.5th percentiles). RRs were compared to those quoted by Abbott and UK Pathology Harmony (PH) where possible. For 7 selected tests, RRs were verified using a data mining approach. RESULTS: For chemistry tests (n = 23), Upper or Lower Reference Limits (LRL or URL) were > 20% different from Abbott ranges in 25% of tests (11% from PH ranges) but in 38% for immunoassay tests (n = 13). RRs (mmol/L) for sodium (138−144), potassium (3.8–4.9) and chloride (102−110) were considerably narrower than PH ranges (133–146, 3.5–5.0 and 95–108, respectively). The gender difference for ferritin (M: 29–441, F: 8–193 ng/mL) was more pronounced than reported by Abbott (M: 22–275, F: 5–204 ng/mL). Verification studies showed good agreement for chemistry tests (mean [SD] difference = 0.4% [1.2%]) but less so for immunoassay tests (27% [29%]), particularly for TSH (LRL). CONCLUSION: Where resource permits, we advocate using method-specific RRs in preference to other sources, particularly where method bias and lack of standardisation limits RR transferability and harmonisation. Elsevier 2017-07-05 /pmc/articles/PMC5633846/ /pubmed/29034300 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plabm.2017.06.001 Text en © 2017 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lee, Graham R.
Griffin, Alison
Halton, Kieran
Fitzgibbon, Maria C.
Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?
title Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?
title_full Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?
title_fullStr Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?
title_full_unstemmed Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?
title_short Generating method-specific Reference Ranges – A harmonious outcome?
title_sort generating method-specific reference ranges – a harmonious outcome?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5633846/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29034300
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.plabm.2017.06.001
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