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Title: Biological Variation Estimates Obtained from 91 Healthy Study Participants for 9 Enzymes in Serum. Author: Carobene A, Røraas T, Sølvik UØ, Sylte MS, Sandberg S, Guerra E, Marino I, Jonker N, Barla G, Bartlett WA, Fernandez-Calle P, Díaz-Garzón J, Tosato F, Plebani M, Coşkun A, Serteser M, Unsal I, Ceriotti F, European Biological Variation Study of the EFLM Working Group on Biological Variation. Journal: Clin Chem; 2017 Jun; 63(6):1141-1150. PubMed ID: 28428356. Abstract: BACKGROUND: We sought to develop estimates of biological variation (BV) for 9 enzymes in blood serum as part of the European Biological Variation Study. METHODS: Ninety-one healthy study participants (38 male and 53 female, 21-69 years old) were phlebotomized in each of 10 consecutive weeks at 6 European laboratories. The same preanalytical sample-handling protocol was followed at each center before transport to San Raffaele Hospital, Milan, Italy, for analysis. Sera were stored at -80 °C before analysis in duplicate within a single run on an ADVIA 2400 Clinical Chemistry System (Siemens Healthcare) following a protocol designed to minimize analytical imprecision. Assay traceability was established using frozen sera with target values assigned by reference methods. The results were subjected to outlier analysis before CV-ANOVA to deliver valid BV estimates. Results for 9 enzymes were subsequently partitioned for graphical display allowing visual assessment of the effects of country of origin, sex, and age on BV estimates. RESULTS: We found no effect of country upon the observed variation, but overall sex-related differences were evident for alanine amino transferase (ALT), γ-glutamyl transferase (GGT), and creatine kinase (CK). The following estimates for within-subject BV (CVI) and between-subject BV (CVG), respectively, were obtained: ALT: 9.3%, 28.2%; aspartate aminotransferase: 9.5%, 20.3%; GGT: 8.9%, 41.7%; alkaline phosphatase : 5.3%, 24.9%; lactate dehydrogenase: 5.2%, 12.6%; CK: 14.5%, 31.5%; amylase: 6.8%, 30.4%; pancreatic α-amylase: 6.3%, 24.9%; and lipase (LIP): 7.7%, 23.8%. CONCLUSIONS: All CVI and some CVG estimates were lower than those reported in the online BV 2014 updated database. Analytical performance specifications derived from BV can be applied internationally.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]