ISSN  2587-2362  |  E-ISSN  2618-642X
Reference change value and measurement uncertainty of CRP, ferritin, procalcitonin, troponin I, and BNP tests in COVID-19 monitoring: How much change is significant? [Int J Med Biochem ]
Int J Med Biochem . 2021; 4(3): 150-156 | DOI: 10.14744/ijmb.2021.30602

Reference change value and measurement uncertainty of CRP, ferritin, procalcitonin, troponin I, and BNP tests in COVID-19 monitoring: How much change is significant?

Nergiz Zorbozan1, Orçun Zorbozan2
1Department of Biochemistry, İzmir Kemalpaşa State Hospital, İzmir, Turkey
2Department of Medical Parasitology, Ege University Faculty of Medicine, İzmir, Turkey

INTRODUCTION: This study was designed to determine the point of clinically significant change in consecutive measurements of high concentrations of C reactive protein (CRP), ferritin, procalcitonin, troponin I, and brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) in patients diagnosed with COVID-19.
METHODS: The reference change value (RCV) for each analyte was estimated using the following formula: RCV=21/2×Z×(CVa2+CVi2)1/2. The combined RCV was calculated using the mean CV value determined using different concentrations. Measurement uncertainty (MU) was estimated according to NordTest guideline. The root-mean-square (RMS) bias and nominal uncertainty values (uCref) were calculated. Standard uncertainty (ubias) and combined standard uncertainty (u) were calculated using the formula RMSbias²+uCref² and √(uRW²+ubias²)/2, respectively. Expanded uncertainty (U) was obtained by multiplying u by a coverage factor.
RESULTS: The lowest RCV values of CRP, ferritin, procalcitonin, BNP, and troponin I tests were 94.57%, 37.16%, 40.55%, 42.01%, and 28.99%, respectively. The combined RCV value was 94.6%, 38.31%, 41.57%, 42.35%, and 29.36% for CRP, ferritin, procalcitonin, troponin I, and BNP, respectively. The U of the CRP test was between 4.70%, and 5.49%. The lowest MU values of ferritin, troponin I, and BNP tests were 48.45%, 48.24%, and 53%, respectively.
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Providing the RCV and MU values with the test results in laboratory reports of these important biomarkers, which are frequently seen in high concentrations in COVID-19 patients, would offer valuable information for more accurate clinical interpretation.

Keywords: COVID-19, measurement uncertainty, reference change value.

Corresponding Author: Nergiz Zorbozan, Türkiye
Manuscript Language: English
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