Proposal of Modified HIL-indices for Determining Hemolysis, Icterus and Lipemia Interference on the Beckman Coulter AU5800 Automated Platform

Background: The amount of interference due to hemolysis, bilirubin, and lipemia can be measured on the AU5800 autoanalyzer (Beckman Coulter, USA) by spectrophotometry. This is reported as semi-quantitative indices, specifically H-index, I-index, and L-index, respectively. In this study, we evaluated...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inLaboratory Medicine Online Vol. 7; no. 2; pp. 66 - 72
Main Authors Lim, Yong Kwan, Cha, Young Joo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published 대한진단검사의학회 01.04.2017
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ISSN2093-6338
2093-6338
DOI10.3343/lmo.2017.7.2.66

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Summary:Background: The amount of interference due to hemolysis, bilirubin, and lipemia can be measured on the AU5800 autoanalyzer (Beckman Coulter, USA) by spectrophotometry. This is reported as semi-quantitative indices, specifically H-index, I-index, and L-index, respectively. In this study, we evaluated the impact of interference using chemistry assays and established the concentration of interfering substances and HIL-index above which analytically significant interference exists, according to CLSI guidelines C56-A and EP7-A2. Methods: Pooled sera including different concentrations of analytes were prepared and mixed with hemoglobin, bilirubin, or Intralipid. These samples were then tested for 35 clinical chemistry analytes by AU5800 and the bias based on interferent concentrations was computed. The interferent concentration above which significant interference exists was calculated from the 50% within-subject biological variation (desirable analytic goal), and the corresponding index was assigned. Results: Among 35 items evaluated, interference was detected for 12 analytes by hemoglobin, 7 analytes by bilirubin, and 12 analytes by Intralipid. We proposed HIL-index1 and HIL-index2 for each analyte according to 2 different medical decision levels. HIL-index1 and HIL-index2 were considered more reasonable criteria than the HIL-index from the manufacturer’s technical document (HIL-indexTD). This is because HIL-indexTD was empirically set to 5% or 10%, and had a wide tolerance range, which was not sufficient to reflect the presence of interference, compared to HIL-index1 and HIL-index2. Conclusions: We have demonstrated hemoglobin, bilirubin, and Intralipid interferences according to CLSI guidelines using the desirable analytic goal. Our results provide applicable information for Beckman Coulter automated chemistry analyzers. KCI Citation Count: 0
Bibliography:G704-SER000002688.2017.7.2.001
ISSN:2093-6338
2093-6338
DOI:10.3343/lmo.2017.7.2.66