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'Aussie normals': an a priori study to develop clinical chemistry reference intervals in a healthy Australian population

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Authors

Koerbin, G.
Cavanaugh, Juleen
Potter, Julia
Abhayaratna, Walter
West, Nicholas P.
Glasgow, Nicholas
Hawkins, Carolyn
Armbruster, David
Oakman, C.
Hickman, Peter

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Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

Development of reference intervalsisdifficult, time consuming, expensive and beyond the scope of most laboratories. The Aussie Normals study is a direct a priori study to determine reference intervals in healthy Australian adults. All volunteers completed a health and lifestyle questionnaire and exclusion was basedon conditions such as pregnancy, diabetes, renal or cardiovascular disease. Up to 91 biochemical analyses were undertaken on a variety of analytical platforms using serum samples collected from 1856 volunteers. We report on our findings for 40 of these analytesand two calculated parameters performed on the Abbott ARCHITECTci8200/ci16200 analysers. Not all samples were analysed for all assays due to volume requirements or assay/instrument availability. Results with elevated interference indices and those deemed unsuitable after clinical evaluation were removed from the database. Reference intervals were partitioned based on the method of Harris and Boyd into three scenarios, combined gender, males and females and age and gender. We have performed a detailed reference interval study on a healthy Australian popu-lationconsideringtheeffectsofsex, ageandbodymass. These reference intervals may be adapted to other manufacturer's analytical methods using method transference.

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Pathology

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Restricted until

2037-12-31
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