Determination of reference intervals for common chemistry and immunoassay tests for Kenyan adults based on an internationally harmonized protocol and up-to-date statistical methods
Autor: | Jane Mwangi, P. J. Ojwang, Caroline Wambua, Angela Amayo, Rajiv T Erasmus, Zul Premji, Elizabeth Kagotho, Daniel Maina, Kiyoshi Ichihara, Mariza Hoffman, Geoffrey Omuse, Alice Kanyua |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Male
Biochemistry chemistry.chemical_compound Spectrum Analysis Techniques Endocrinology Reference Values Medicine and Health Sciences Urea Ethnicities Thyroid Immunoassay education.field_of_study Multidisciplinary medicine.diagnostic_test Organic Compounds Anemia Hematology Middle Aged Reference Standards Lipids Healthy Volunteers Chemistry Cholesterol Spectrophotometry Data Interpretation Statistical Physical Sciences Medicine Female Anatomy Research Article Adult medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Endocrine Disorders Science Population Endocrine System Research and Analysis Methods Young Adult Sex Factors Internal medicine Diabetes Mellitus medicine Humans Immunoassays education Aged African People Protocol (science) Creatinine Transferrin saturation Organic Chemistry Chemical Compounds Biology and Life Sciences medicine.disease Kenya Reference intervals Biological Variation Population chemistry Metabolic Disorders People and Places Immunologic Techniques Population Groupings Biomarkers Blood Chemical Analysis TBIL Densitometry Turbidimetry |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 7, p e0235234 (2020) PLoS ONE |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
DOI: | 10.1371/journal.pone.0235234 |
Popis: | BackgroundDue to a lack of reliable reference intervals (RIs) for Kenya, we set out to determine RIs for 40 common chemistry and immunoassay tests as part of the IFCC global RI project.MethodsApparently healthy adults aged 18-65 years were recruited according to a harmonized protocol and samples analyzed using Beckman-Coulter analyzers. Value assigned serum panels were measured to standardize chemistry results. The need for partitioning reference values by sex and age was based on between-subgroup differences expressed as standard deviation ratio (SDR) or bias in lower or upper limits (LLs and ULs) of the RI. RIs were derived using a parametric method with/without latent abnormal value exclusion (LAVE).ResultsSex-specific RIs were required for uric acid, creatinine, total bilirubin (TBil), total cholesterol (TC), ALT, AST, CK, GGT, transferrin, transferrin saturation (TfSat) and immunoglobulin-M. Age-specific RIs were required for glucose and triglyceride for both sexes, and for urea, magnesium, TC, HDL-cholesterol ratio, ALP, and ferritin for females. LAVE was effective in optimizing RIs for AST, ALT, GGT iron-markers and CRP by reducing influence of latent anemia and metabolic diseases. Thyroid profile RIs were derived after excluding volunteers with anti-thyroid antibodies. Kenyan RIs were comparable to those of other countries participating in the global study with a few exceptions such as higher ULs for TBil and CRP.ConclusionsKenyan RIs for major analytes were established using harmonized protocol from well-defined reference individuals. Standardized RIs for chemistry analytes can be shared across sub-Saharan African laboratories with similar ethnic and life-style profile. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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