The presence of elevated levels of bilirubin (icterus) in serum or plasma specimens has the potential to interfere with clinical chemistry and other laboratory assays. Along with hemolysis and lipemia, icterus represents one of the most common endogenous interferences with laboratory tests. There are two common mechanisms by which icterus can cause assay interference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: The aims of this study were to identify the causes of severe icterus in an academic medical center patient population and to assess the impact of icterus on clinical chemistry testing using assay package insert thresholds.
Design: : In this retrospective study at an academic medical center core clinical laboratory, icteric, hemolysis, and lipemia indices were available for all serum and plasma chemistry specimens analyzed on Roche Diagnostics cobas 8000 analyzers over a 12-month period, encompassing 414,502 specimens from 94,081 unique patients (51,851 females; 42,230 males) including children, inpatient, outpatient, and emergency department patients. Extensive chart review was done for all 57 patients (4 pediatric, 53 adult; 534 total specimens) who had one or more samples with an icteric index of 40 or higher (defined as severe icterus).
Objectives: The aims of this study were to identify the causes of severe lipemia in an academic medical center patient population and to determine the relationship between lipemia and hemolysis.
Design And Methods: Retrospective study was done on the data from the core clinical laboratory at an academic medical center. Lipemic indices were available for all chemistry specimens analyzed over a 16-month period (n=552,029 specimens) and for serum/plasma triglycerides concentrations ordered for clinical purposes over a 16-year period (n=393,085 specimens).