HJF Medical Research International, Kisumu, Kenya.
U.S. Army Medical Research Directorate-Africa, Kisumu, Kenya.
PLoS One. 2021 Mar 30;16(3):e0249259. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0249259. eCollection 2021.
Clinical laboratory reference intervals (RIs) are essential for diagnosing and managing patients in routine clinical care as well as establishing eligibility criteria and defining adverse events in clinical trials, but may vary by age, gender, genetics, nutrition and geographic location. It is, therefore, critical to establish region-specific reference values in order to inform clinical decision-making.
We analyzed data from a prospective observational HIV incidence cohort study in Kombewa, Kenya. Study participants were healthy males and females, aged 18-35 years, without HIV. Median and 95% reference values (2.5th percentile to 97.5th percentile) were calculated for laboratory parameters including hematology, chemistry studies, and CD4 T cell count. Standard Deviation Ratios (SDR) and Bias Ratios (BR) are presented as measures of effect magnitude. Findings were compared with those from the United States and other Kenyan studies.
A total of 299 participants were analyzed with a median age of 24 years (interquartile range: 21-28). Ratio of males to females was 0.9:1. Hemoglobin range (2.5th-97.5th percentiles) was 12.0-17.9 g/dL and 9.5-15.3 g/dL in men and women respectively. In the cohort, MCV range was 59-95fL, WBC 3.7-9.2×103/μL, and platelet 154-401×103/μL. Chemistry values were higher in males; the creatinine RI was 59-103 μmol/L in males vs. 46-76 μmol/L in females (BRUL>.3); and the alanine transferase range was 8.8-45.3 U/L in males vs. 7.5-36.8 U/L in females (SDR>.3). The overall CD4 T cell count RI was 491-1381 cells/μL. Some parameters including hemoglobin, neutrophil, creatinine and ALT varied with that from prior studies in Kenya and the US.
This study not only provides clinical reference intervals for a population in Kisumu County but also highlights the variations in comparable settings, accentuating the requirement for region-specific reference values to improve patient care, scientific validity, and quality of clinical trials in Africa.
临床实验室参考区间(RI)对于常规临床护理中的患者诊断和管理以及临床试验的入选标准和不良事件定义至关重要,但可能因年龄、性别、遗传、营养和地理位置而有所不同。因此,建立特定于该地区的参考值对于指导临床决策至关重要。
我们分析了肯尼亚 Kombewa 一项前瞻性观察性 HIV 发病率队列研究的数据。研究参与者为年龄在 18-35 岁之间的健康男性和女性,无 HIV 感染。计算了包括血液学、化学研究和 CD4 T 细胞计数在内的实验室参数的中位数和 95%参考值(第 2.5 百分位数至第 97.5 百分位数)。标准偏差比(SDR)和偏差比(BR)用于衡量效应大小。并将研究结果与美国和其他肯尼亚研究进行了比较。
共分析了 299 名参与者,中位年龄为 24 岁(四分位间距:21-28 岁)。男女比例为 0.9:1。血红蛋白范围(2.5 百分位至 97.5 百分位)分别为男性 12.0-17.9 g/dL 和女性 9.5-15.3 g/dL。在该队列中,MCV 范围为 59-95fL,WBC 为 3.7-9.2×103/μL,血小板为 154-401×103/μL。男性的化学值较高;男性的肌酐 RI 为 59-103 μmol/L,而女性为 46-76 μmol/L(BRUL>.3);男性丙氨酸氨基转移酶范围为 8.8-45.3 U/L,女性为 7.5-36.8 U/L(SDR>.3)。总的 CD4 T 细胞计数 RI 为 491-1381 个/μL。一些参数,包括血红蛋白、中性粒细胞、肌酐和 ALT,与肯尼亚和美国之前的研究不同。
本研究不仅为基苏木县的人群提供了临床参考区间,还强调了在类似环境中的差异,突出了特定于该地区的参考值的重要性,以改善非洲患者的护理、科学有效性和临床试验质量。