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Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests

The presence of elevated levels of bilirubin (icterus) in serum or plasma specimens has the potential to interfere with clinical chemistry and other laboratory assays. Along with hemolysis and lipemia, icterus represents one of the most common endogenous interferences with laboratory tests. There ar...

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Autores principales: Merrill, Anna E., Mainali, Sandhya, Krasowski, Matthew D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8743196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35036480
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2021.107771
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author Merrill, Anna E.
Mainali, Sandhya
Krasowski, Matthew D.
author_facet Merrill, Anna E.
Mainali, Sandhya
Krasowski, Matthew D.
author_sort Merrill, Anna E.
collection PubMed
description The presence of elevated levels of bilirubin (icterus) in serum or plasma specimens has the potential to interfere with clinical chemistry and other laboratory assays. Along with hemolysis and lipemia, icterus represents one of the most common endogenous interferences with laboratory tests. There are two common mechanisms by which icterus can cause assay interference. The first common mechanism is spectral interference due to absorption at wavelengths used in assays by bilirubin and/or bilirubin breakdown products. The second common mechanism involves chemical reaction of bilirubin with the reagents used in some enzymatic assays. Most automated clinical chemistry platforms can perform rapid estimates of indices for hemolysis, icterus, and lipemia (HIL), typically by measuring absorbance at wavelengths impacted by these interferences. The data in this article provides results from a detailed 12-month retrospective review of icteric indices and the impact on 114 clinical chemistry assays at an academic medical center in the United States. The data include 414,502 specimens from 94,081 unique patients (51,851 females; 42,230 males), with a total of 2,791,591 discrete clinical chemistry assays performed on the specimens. Detailed chart review was performed for all patients who had one or more specimens with an icteric index of 40 or higher (‘severe icterus’), including determination of the medical diagnoses likely causing icterus and the mortality of these patients within 1 and 3 years following laboratory testing. Data for all specimens include patient location at time of testing (emergency department, inpatient unit, or outpatient site), sex, age, HIL indices, specific clinical chemistry assays performed, and number of times specimens had icteric indices exceeding the icteric index threshold in the package inserts for the clinical chemistry assays performed. The dataset reported is related to the research entitled “Frequency of Icteric Interference in Clinical Chemistry Laboratory Tests and Causes of Severe Icterus” [S. Mainali, A.E. Merrill, M.D. Krasowski, Frequency of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests and causes of severe icterus, Pract. Lab. Med. (2021) 27: e00259]
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spelling pubmed-87431962022-01-13 Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests Merrill, Anna E. Mainali, Sandhya Krasowski, Matthew D. Data Brief Data Article The presence of elevated levels of bilirubin (icterus) in serum or plasma specimens has the potential to interfere with clinical chemistry and other laboratory assays. Along with hemolysis and lipemia, icterus represents one of the most common endogenous interferences with laboratory tests. There are two common mechanisms by which icterus can cause assay interference. The first common mechanism is spectral interference due to absorption at wavelengths used in assays by bilirubin and/or bilirubin breakdown products. The second common mechanism involves chemical reaction of bilirubin with the reagents used in some enzymatic assays. Most automated clinical chemistry platforms can perform rapid estimates of indices for hemolysis, icterus, and lipemia (HIL), typically by measuring absorbance at wavelengths impacted by these interferences. The data in this article provides results from a detailed 12-month retrospective review of icteric indices and the impact on 114 clinical chemistry assays at an academic medical center in the United States. The data include 414,502 specimens from 94,081 unique patients (51,851 females; 42,230 males), with a total of 2,791,591 discrete clinical chemistry assays performed on the specimens. Detailed chart review was performed for all patients who had one or more specimens with an icteric index of 40 or higher (‘severe icterus’), including determination of the medical diagnoses likely causing icterus and the mortality of these patients within 1 and 3 years following laboratory testing. Data for all specimens include patient location at time of testing (emergency department, inpatient unit, or outpatient site), sex, age, HIL indices, specific clinical chemistry assays performed, and number of times specimens had icteric indices exceeding the icteric index threshold in the package inserts for the clinical chemistry assays performed. The dataset reported is related to the research entitled “Frequency of Icteric Interference in Clinical Chemistry Laboratory Tests and Causes of Severe Icterus” [S. Mainali, A.E. Merrill, M.D. Krasowski, Frequency of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests and causes of severe icterus, Pract. Lab. Med. (2021) 27: e00259] Elsevier 2021-12-30 /pmc/articles/PMC8743196/ /pubmed/35036480 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2021.107771 Text en © 2021 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Data Article
Merrill, Anna E.
Mainali, Sandhya
Krasowski, Matthew D.
Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
title Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
title_full Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
title_fullStr Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
title_full_unstemmed Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
title_short Data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
title_sort data on the frequency and causes of icteric interference in clinical chemistry laboratory tests
topic Data Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8743196/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35036480
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2021.107771
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