Literature DB >> 12867273

Reference intervals: an update.

Paul S Horn1, Amadeo J Pesce.   

Abstract

Reference intervals serve as the basis of laboratory testing and aid the physician in differentiating between the healthy and diseased patient. Standard methods for determining the reference interval are to define and obtain a healthy population of at least 120 individuals and use nonparametric estimates of the 95% reference interval. This method is less accurate if the group size is significantly less and does not allow for exclusion of outliers. In order to overcome these limitations many authors in the current literature report reference intervals after arbitrary truncation of the data or use inappropriate parametric calculations. We argue that the use of outlier removal and robust estimators, with or without transformation to normality, address the shortcomings of the standard method and eliminate the need for employing less valid methods.To test these methods of analysis well-defined test groups are required. In a few studies physician-determined health status is provided for each subject along with commonly measured analytes. The NHANES and Fernald studies provide such groups. With such data it is possible to show the range of effects on the reference interval width by including a known non-healthy subgroup. With the NHANES data the effect ranged from negligible to a 30% increase in reference interval width. We found that use of outlier detection with the robust estimator yielded reference intervals that were closer to those of the true healthy group.Another issue is one of demographics. That is, whether or not one should derive separate reference intervals for different demographic groups, e.g., males and females. The standard mathematical test for deriving separate reference intervals is due to Harris and Boyd. Using the NHANES data we examined 33 analytes for each of three ethnic groups (separated by genders). We used the Harris and Boyd procedure and observed that it was necessary to derive separate reference intervals for approximately 30% of the comparisons. The most notable analytes were glucose and gamma GT.The methods used by most laboratories have similar precision, identical units, are linearly related (often on a 1:1 basis) and correlate well with each other. As a result the only difference is the method bias. By using the reference interval width, this bias is eliminated. We argue that the log ratio of the reference interval widths is a good estimate of the variability between groups.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12867273     DOI: 10.1016/s0009-8981(03)00133-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Chim Acta        ISSN: 0009-8981            Impact factor:   3.786


  96 in total

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4.  Age and sex variability and normal reference values for the V(MCA)/V(ICA) index.

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5.  Sickle cell disease: reference values and interhemispheric differences of nonimaging transcranial Doppler blood flow parameters.

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8.  Whether western normative laboratory values used for clinical diagnosis are applicable to Indian population? An overview on reference interval.

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9.  Reference intervals of several renal and hepatic function parameters for apparently healthy adults from Eastern China.

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Journal:  J Clin Lab Anal       Date:  2014-05-05       Impact factor: 2.352

10.  CLSI-derived hematology and biochemistry reference intervals for healthy adults in eastern and southern Africa.

Authors:  Etienne Karita; Nzeera Ketter; Matt A Price; Kayitesi Kayitenkore; Pontiano Kaleebu; Annet Nanvubya; Omu Anzala; Walter Jaoko; Gaudensia Mutua; Eugene Ruzagira; Joseph Mulenga; Eduard J Sanders; Mary Mwangome; Susan Allen; Agnes Bwanika; Ubaldo Bahemuka; Ken Awuondo; Gloria Omosa; Bashir Farah; Pauli Amornkul; Josephine Birungi; Sarah Yates; Lisa Stoll-Johnson; Jill Gilmour; Gwynn Stevens; Erin Shutes; Olivier Manigart; Peter Hughes; Len Dally; Janet Scott; Wendy Stevens; Pat Fast; Anatoli Kamali
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-02-06       Impact factor: 3.240

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