Bilirubin measured on a blood gas analyser: a suitable alternative for near-patient assessment of neonatal jaundice?

Ann Clin Biochem

Routine Biochemistry, SouthPath, Flinders Medical Centre, Bedford Park, South Australia, Australia.

Published: September 2001

The reliability of a recently released total bilirubin assay for a blood gas analyser was assessed in two Australian hospital laboratories. The instrument computes total bilirubin concentration from multi-wavelength absorbance measurements of undiluted whole blood or plasma. Performance of the Radiometer ABL 735 blood gas analyser bilirubin method (software version 3.6) was compared with a proven Roche diazo method for Hitachi analysers, calibrated using primary standards prepared from NIST SRM 916a bilirubin. Acceptable bilirubin results were found over a wide concentration range for most neonatal samples of whole blood or plasma. For adult specimens, bilirubin results were approximately 10% lower on the blood gas analyser. Within-run imprecision (whole blood) was < 2.5%, between-day imprecision (synthetic controls) < 1.0%, and the bilirubin assay for both whole blood and plasma was linear to 1,000 micromol/L. Using sampling options from 35 microL to 195 microL, bilirubin results differed by less than 3%, with a 95 microL syringe option producing the highest results. We conclude that the Radiometer ABL 735 bilirubin assay is suitable for near-patient assessment of neonatal jaundice using whole blood, thus eliminating the need for sample centrifugation. Verification using laboratory methods can be used when required. A positive correction of approximately 10% is required for adult specimens to conform with Hitachi results (SRM 916a calibration), possibly due to the optical characteristics of the higher proportion of conjugated bilirubin and other substances present in most adult samples.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/000456320103800511DOI Listing

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