Do Serum Creatinine Levels Show Clinically Significant Fluctuations on Serial Determinations on the Siemens Advia 1800 Analyzer?

TitleDo Serum Creatinine Levels Show Clinically Significant Fluctuations on Serial Determinations on the Siemens Advia 1800 Analyzer?
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2017
AuthorsLevitan D, Harper AE, Sun Y, Carniello JVScarpa, Momeni A, Kagan J, Alexis H, Eid I, Harris L, Marshal B, Tafani E, Pincus M
JournalJ Clin Lab Anal
Volume31
Issue1
Date Published2017 Jan
ISSN1098-2825
KeywordsChemistry, Clinical, Creatinine, Humans, Reference Values
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The goal of this work was to determine whether there are clinically significant fluctuations in the level of serum creatinine on serial determinations, especially in the borderline range (1.1-1.3 mg/dl), after specimen storage.

METHODS: Sixty-one serum samples were analyzed. They were divided into three categories based on the initial serum creatinine measurement: low (≤1.0 mg/dl), borderline (1.1-1.3 mg/dl), and high (≥1.4 mg/dl). The specimens were stored at 4°C and run on the Siemens Advia 1800 chemistry analyzer on days 1, 3, and 11.

RESULTS: Statistical comparisons of the three groups were made using the unpaired t-test, yielding a two-tailed P-value for each group comparison. The P-values ranged from 0.0829 to 0.3892, indicating no statistically significant difference between the standard deviations of each group.

CONCLUSIONS: Mild-to-moderate fluctuations in precision occur in successive serum creatinine determinations. The overwhelming majority of these fluctuations should not affect clinical decision making.

DOI10.1002/jcla.22012
Alternate JournalJ Clin Lab Anal
PubMed ID27364416
PubMed Central IDPMC6817257
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