Establishment of paediatric biochemical reference intervals

Date

2004

Authors

Brinkworth, R.
Whitham, E.
Nazeran, H.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

Annals of Clinical Biochemistry, 2004; 41(4):321-329

Statement of Responsibility

Russell S.A. Brinkworth, Elaine Whitham, and Homer Nazeran

Conference Name

Abstract

<jats:p> Background: The standard method for the determination of reference values in a population by testing a number of healthy volunteers is difficult within the paediatric age group; this study explores an alternative approach. </jats:p><jats:p> Methods: Biochemical blood test results collected by the Woman's and Children's Hospital over a 1 year period were used and the data selected to ensure, as far as possible, that the results were from patients who were 'healthy'. This was achieved using various selection criteria, such as the exclusion of patients with more than one test episode. Some of the data were skewed, making standard statistical approaches difficult. In such cases, transformations were used to ensure that the resulting information had a distribution that was approximately Gaussian. </jats:p><jats:p> Results: Data from different biochemical tests covering both genders and ages in the range 0-18 years were collected; this included more than 250 000 laboratory test results. After elimination of non-representative data and tests with insufficient results, there were approximately 23 500 results covering almost 3000 individuals and 16 different biochemical tests. There were no results from very young children (&lt; 1 year) after the data selection process; hence the derivation of reference values from that age group was not possible. </jats:p><jats:p> Conclusions: This approach permitted better delineation of reference intervals for common biochemical tests performed on paediatric patients than is currently readily available. In addition, some important benchmarks for transformation of medical data have been found. </jats:p>

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Copyright © 2004 The Association of Clinical Biochemists

Access Status

Rights

License

Grant ID

Call number

Persistent link to this record