14 research outputs found

    Indirect determination of biochemistry reference intervals using outpatient data

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    Creatinine; Urea; Clinical chemistryCreatinina; Urea; Química clínicaCreatinina; Urea; Química clínicaThe aim of this study was to determine reference intervals in an outpatient population from Vall d’Hebron laboratory using an indirect approach previously described in a Dutch population (NUMBER project). We used anonymized test results from individuals visiting general practitioners and analysed during 2018. Analytical quality was assured by EQA performance, daily average monitoring and by assessing longitudinal accuracy between 2018 and 2020 (using trueness verifiers from Dutch EQA). Per test, outliers by biochemically related tests were excluded, data were transformed to a normal distribution (if necessary) and means and standard deviations were calculated, stratified by age and sex. In addition, the reference limit estimator method was also used to calculate reference intervals using the same dataset. Finally, for standardized tests reference intervals obtained were compared with the published NUMBER results. Reference intervals were calculated using data from 509,408 clinical requests. For biochemical tests following a normal distribution, similar reference intervals were found between Vall d’Hebron and the Dutch study. For creatinine and urea, reference intervals increased with age in both populations. The upper limits of Gamma-glutamyl transferase were markedly higher in the Dutch study compared to Vall d’Hebron results. Creatine kinase and uric acid reference intervals were higher in both populations compared to conventional reference intervals. Medical test results following a normal distribution showed comparable and consistent reference intervals between studies. Therefore a simple indirect method is a feasible and cost-efficient approach for calculating reference intervals. Yet, for generating standardized calculated reference intervals that are traceable to higher order materials and methods, efforts should also focus on test standardization and bias assessment using commutable trueness verifiers

    Mannose-binding lectin deficiency is associated with early onset of polyarticular juvenile rheumatoid arthritis: a cohort study

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    BACKGROUND: Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) is an innate immune protein. The aim of our study was to determine whether genetically determined MBL deficiency is associated with susceptibility to juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) and whether MBL2 genotypes are associated with JRA severity. METHODS: In a retrospective cohort study of 218 patients with polyarthritis (n = 67) and oligoarthritis (n = 151), clinical and laboratory disease variables were obtained by clinical examination and chart reviews. Healthy Caucasian adults (n = 194) served as control individuals. MBL2 gene mutations were determined by Taqman analysis to identify genotypes with high, medium and low expression of MBL. Functional MBL plasma concentrations were measured using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Associations between clinical and laboratory variables and MBL2 genotypes were determined by Kruskal-Wallis and χ(2 )tests. RESULTS: MBL2 genotype frequencies were similar in polyarthritis and oligoarthritis patients as compared with control individuals. MBL plasma concentrations were associated with the high, medium and low MBL genotype expression groups (P < 0.01). In polyarthritis patients, the presence of low-expressing (deficient) MBL2 genotypes was associated with early age at onset of disease (P = 0.03). In oligoarthritis patients, patients with low-expressing MBL2 genotypes were more often in remission (81%) than patients in the medium (54%) and high (56%) genotype groups (P = 0.02). The remaining clinical and laboratory variables, such as arthritis severity index, presence of radiographic erosions and antinuclear antibody positivity, were not associated with MBL2 genotypes. CONCLUSION: Genetically determined MBL deficiency does not increase susceptibility to JRA, but MBL deficiency is associated with a younger age at onset of juvenile polyarthritis. On the other hand, MBL-deficient children with juvenile oligoarthritis are more often in remission. Therefore, MBL appears to play a dual role in JRA

    Traceability in laboratory medicine: a global driver for accurate results for patient care

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    Laboratory medicine results influence a high percentage of all clinical decisions. Globalization requires that laboratory medicine results should be transferable between methods in the interests of patient safety. International collaboration is necessary to deliver this requirement. That collaboration should be based on traceability in laboratory medicine and the adoption of higher order international commutable reference materials and measurement procedures. Application of the metrological traceability chain facilitates a universal approach. The measurement of serum cholesterol and blood HbA1c serve as examples of the process of method standardization where an impact on clinical outcomes is demonstrable. The measurement of plasma parathyroid hormone and blood HbA2 serve as examples where the current between-method variability is compromising patient management and method standardization and/or harmonization is required. Challenges to the widespread adoption of traceability in laboratory medicine include the availability of reference materials and methods, geographical differences, the use of variable units, complex analytes and limited global coordination. The global collaboration requires the involvement of several different stakeholder groups ranging from international experts to laboratory medicine specialists in routine clinical laboratories. A coordinated action plan is presented with actions attributable to each of these stakeholder groups

    An analysis of genetic variation across the MBL2 locus in Dutch Caucasians indicates that 3 ' haplotypes could modify circulating levels of mannose-binding lectin

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    Mannose-binding protein (MBL) is a critical component of innate immunity and provides first-line protection against pathogens. Both circulating MBL serum levels and functional activity have been correlated with common genetic variants in the MBL2 gene. Associations between MBL deficiency and severe infections have been reported in immuno-incompetent patients and for autoimmune disorders; however, measured MBL serum levels do not fully correlate with the 'secretor haplotypes'. Previously, the MBL2 locus was resequenced and determined that a recombination hotspot divides MBL2 into two haplotype blocks. It was sought to investigate whether additional variants, in either block structure could associate with MBL serum levels. Therefore, 31 common variants were analysed across the locus in 212 DNA samples of healthy Caucasian individuals with known MBL serum concentrations. The additional 5' variants were in strong linkage to the elements of the 'secretor haplotypes'; functional alleles B, C and D also lie on restricted haplotypes. Four variants in the 3' block (Ex4-1483T>C, Ex4-1067G>A, Ex4-901G>A and Ex4-710G>A) are components of a distinct haplotype block. The results of this study suggest that additional 5' variants as well as markers of distinct 3' haplotype blocks in MBL2 may contribute to circulating protein levels, but further studies are required to confirm these observations. Last, there could be a selective advantage for diversification of the 3' region of the gen

    Plasma-derived mannose-binding lectin shows a direct interaction with C1-inhibitor

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    MBL-deficiency has been associated with an increased frequency and severity of infection, in particular in children and under immunocompromized conditions. In an open uncontrolled safety and pharmacokinetic MBL-substitution study using plasma-derived MBL (pdMBL) in MBL-deficient pediatric oncology patients, we found that despite MBL trough levels above 1.0ÎĽg/ml MBL functionality was not efficiently restored upon ex vivo testing. PdMBL showed C4-converting activity by itself, indicating the presence of MASPs. Upon incubation of pdMBL with MBL-deficient sera this C4-converting activity was significantly reduced. Depletion of the MASPs from pdMBL, paradoxically, restored the C4-converting activity. Subsequent depletion or inhibition of C1-inh, the major inhibitor of the lectin pathway, in the recipient serum restored the C4-converting activity as well. Complexes between MBL/MASPs and C1-inh (MMC-complexes) were detected after ex vivo substitution of MBL-deficient serum with pdMBL. These MMC-complexes could also be detected in the sera of the patients included in the MBL-substitution study shortly after pdMBL infusion. Altogether, we concluded that active MBL-MASP complexes in pdMBL directly interact with C1-inh in the recipient, leading to the formation of a multimolecular complex between C1-inh and MBL/MASPs, in contrast to the classical pathway where C1r and C1s are dissociated from C1q by C1-inh. Because of the presence of activated MASPs in the current pdMBL products efficient MBL-mediated host protection cannot be expected because of the neutralizing capacity by C1-in

    Big data and reference intervals: rationale, current practices, harmonization and standardization prerequisites and future perspectives of indirect determination of reference intervals using routine data

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    Reference intervals are commonly used as a decision-making tool. In this review, we provide an overview on “big data” and reference intervals, describing the rationale, current practices including statistical methods, essential prerequisites concerning data quality, including harmonization and standardization, and future perspectives of the indirect determination of reference intervals using routine laboratory data

    Big data e intervalos de referencia: motivación, prácticas actuales, prerrequisitos de armonización y estandarización y futuras perspectivas en el cálculo de intervalos de referencia mediante métodos indirectos

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    Los intervalos de referencia son habitualmente empleados como herramienta de apoyo a las decisiones clínicas. En esta revisión se resumen los aspectos relacionados con el big data y los intervalos de referencia, las prácticas actuales, incluyendo los métodos estadísticos, los requisitos de calidad de los datos, incluyendo la armonización y la normalización, y las perspectivas de futuro para la determinación indirecta de intervalos de referencia mediante datos de laboratorio de rutina

    Big data and reference intervals : rationale, current practices, harmonization and standardization prerequisites and future perspectives of indirect determination of reference intervals using routine data

    No full text
    Reference intervals are commonly used as a decision-making tool. In this review, we provide an overview on "big data" and reference intervals, describing the rationale, current practices including statistical methods, essential prerequisites concerning data quality, including harmonization and standardization, and future perspectives of the indirect determination of reference intervals using routine laboratory data
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