dc.identifier.citation | Ichihara, K., Ozarda, Y., Barth, J. H., Klee, G., Qiu, L., Erasmus, R., ... & Yadav, B. K. (2017). A global multicenter study on reference values: 1. Assessment of methods for derivation and comparison of reference intervals. Clinica Chimica Acta, 467, 70-82. https://doi:10.1016/j.cca.2016.09.016 | en |
dc.description.abstract | Objectives: The IFCC Committee on Reference Intervals and Decision Limits coordinated a global multicenter study on reference values (RVs) to explore rational and harmonizable procedures for derivation of reference intervals (RIs) and investigate the feasibility of sharing RIs through evaluation of sources of variation of RVs on a global scale.
Methods: For the common protocol, rather lenient criteria for reference individuals were adopted to facilitate harmonized recruitment with planned use of the latent abnormal values exclusion (LAVE) method. As of July 2015, 12 countries had completed their study with total recruitment of 13,386 healthy adults. 25 analytes were measured chemically and 25 immunologically. A serum panel with assigned values was measured by all laboratories. RIs were derived by parametric and nonparametric methods.
Results: The effect of LAVE methods is prominent in analytes which reflect nutritional status, inflammation and muscular exertion, indicating that inappropriate results are frequent in any country. The validity of the parametric method was confirmed by the presence of analyte-specific distribution patterns and successful Gaussian transformation using the modified Box-Cox formula in all countries. After successful alignment of RVs based on the panel test results, nearly half the analytes showed variable degrees of between-country differences. This finding, however, requires confirmation after adjusting for BMI and other sources of variation. The results are reported in the second part of this paper.
Conclusion: The collaborative study enabled us to evaluate rational methods for deriving RIs and comparing the RVs based on real-world datasets obtained in a harmonized manner. | en |
dc.description.sponsorship | We are very grateful for the invaluable service of value assignment to the serum panel (produced in 2014) kindly provided by Dr. Anja Kessler and Prof. Lother Siekmann of University of Bonn Faculty of medicine, and Prof. Gerhard Schumann of Hanover University School of Medicine. We appreciate Dr. Joseph Marci for his service of measuring the serum Panel-II in the practice of indirect value assignment. We are also greatly indebted, for the success of this study, to the earnest contributions of local coordinators: Dr. Melahat Dirican (Uludag University School of Medicine, Central Laboratory, Bursa, Turkey), Dr. Liangyu Xia (Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Beijing, China), Dr. Mariza Hoffmann (University of Stellenbosch and national Health Laboratory Services, Tygerberg, South Africa), Ms. Janette Wassung (PathCare Laboratories, Cape Town, South Africa), Prof. Tandi Matsha and Mr. Francois Smit (Faculty of Health and Wellness Science, Cape Peninsula University of Technology, Cape Town, South Africa), Dr. Anna Ruzhanskaya (Beckman Coulter LLC, Moscow, Russia), Dr. Irina Skibo (Helix Medical Laboratories, St. Petersburg, Russia), Dr. Swarup Shah (P. D. Hinduja National Hospital and Medical Research Centre, Mumbai, India), Daniel N Bustos (Faculty of Pharmacy and Biochemistry, University of Buenos Aires, Argentina), Dr. Joely Straseski (University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, UT, USA), Ms. Ashley Bunker (ARUP Laboratories, Salt Lake City, UT, USA), Dr. Kimber Stanhope (University of California, Davis, CA, USA), Dr. Katsuyuki Nakajima (Nakajima Associates Inc., Maebashi, Japan), Ms.Mio Nagai (Yamaguchi University Faculty of Health Sciences, Ube, Japan), and Ms. Aki Takahashi (Beckman Coulter Japan).
The study depended a great deal on the support for assay reagents, and thus, we express our sincere gratitude to the US companies Beckman-Coulter and Abbott Laboratories for their generous support. | en |