Literature DB >> 25332491

Serum bilirubin and bilirubin/albumin ratio as predictors of bilirubin encephalopathy.

Iman Iskander1, Rasha Gamaleldin2, Salma El Houchi2, Amira El Shenawy3, Iman Seoud2, Nesrin El Gharbawi4, Hazem Abou-Youssef4, Aleksandr Aravkin5, Richard P Wennberg6.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
OBJECTIVE: Bilirubin/albumin ratio (B/A) may provide a better estimate of free bilirubin than total serum bilirubin (TSB), thus improving identification of newborns at risk for bilirubin encephalopathy. The objective of the study was to identify thresholds and compare specificities of TSB and B/A in detecting patients with acute and posttreatment auditory and neurologic impairment.
METHODS: A total of 193 term/near-term infants, admitted for severe jaundice to Cairo University Children's Hospital, were evaluated for neurologic status and auditory impairment (automated auditory brainstem response), both at admission and posttreatment by investigators blinded to laboratory results. The relationships of TSB and B/A to advancing stages of neurotoxicity were compared by using receiver operating characteristic curves.
RESULTS: TSB and B/A ranged from 17 to 61 mg/dL and 5.4 to 21.0 mg/g, respectively; 58 (30%) of 193 subjects developed acute bilirubin encephalopathy, leading to kernicterus in 35 infants (13 lethal). Auditory impairment was identified in 86 (49%) of 173 infants at admission and in 22 of 128 at follow-up. In the absence of clinical risk factors, no residual neurologic or hearing impairment occurred unless TSB exceeded 31 mg/dl. However, transient auditory impairment occurred at lower TSB and B/A (22.9 mg/dL and 5.7 mg/g, respectively). Intervention values of TSB and B/A set at high sensitivity to detect different stages of neurotoxicity had nearly the same specificity.
CONCLUSIONS: Both TSB and B/A are strong predictors of neurotoxicity, but B/A does not improve prediction over TSB alone. Threshold values detecting all affected patients (100% sensitivity) increase with advancing severity of neurotoxicity.
Copyright © 2014 by the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Entities:  

Keywords:  auditory impairment; automated auditory brainstem response; bilirubin-induced neurologic dysfunction; bilirubin/albumin ratio; bind score; hyperbilirubinemia; kernicterus

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25332491      PMCID: PMC4210789          DOI: 10.1542/peds.2013-1764

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Pediatrics        ISSN: 0031-4005            Impact factor:   7.124


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