Below is the protocol for calibration of
creatinine concentration reported for whole blood to creatinine
concentration in simultaneously collected venous serum or plasma.
Purpose
NKDEP Laboratory Working Group has
recommended that creatinine concentrations measured in whole blood
should be adjusted and reported to providers as equivalent creatinine
concentrations measured in simultaneously collected venous serum or
plasma, where the serum or plasma measurements are traceable1 to a high-level isotope dilution mass spectrometry (IDMS) Reference Method.2
The purpose of this protocol is to provide manufacturers of whole blood
creatinine measurement devices practical guidance regarding the
calibration of their devices to an IDMS-traceable serum or plasma
method. The protocol may also be used by laboratories reporting
creatinine measured in whole blood to verify agreement of the
measurement to an IDMS traceable serum or plasma method.
Background
Sensors for measurement of creatinine in
whole blood used in clinical practice are enzyme-based biosensors with
electrochemical detection. Like the more commonly used glucose sensors
based on the same technology, creatinine sensors respond to the
molality of creatinine in the sample (amount of creatinine per unit
mass of water in the sample). It has been known for some time that
molality of creatinine in erythrocyte fluid is equal to molality
in plasma3, 4 and that creatinine is transported by passive diffusion through the lipid bilayer of the erythrocyte membrane.5
When these two sample phases are in equilibrium, the measured quantity
in whole blood and its separated plasma by the direct biosensor method
should be identical. The presence of erythrocytes may affect the whole
blood measurement in other ways, for example, by hindering diffusion of
analyte from bulk sample to the surface of the sensor, or by affecting
the electrical conductivity between different elements of the
electrochemical cell. Therefore, in practice, results obtained with
whole blood and simultaneously collected serum or plasma often differ
significantly, are usually sensitive to hematocrit, and correction for
the presence of erythrocytes may be needed to force agreement between
the whole blood and serum or plasma measurements.
This protocol assumes that interfering
substances for the whole blood device have been characterized
separately, and that samples used in Part 1 of the protocol are free of
interfering substances. This protocol also assumes that the whole blood
device has been shown to be linear toward creatinine concentrations
over the manufacturer’s claimed measurement range.
Procedure
- Calibration of whole blood creatinine method to a heparinized plasma IDMS-traceable method at variable hematocrit levels
- A heparinized venous whole blood sample from a healthy
volunteer should be collected in heparin anticoagulated tubes and
determined to be within the adult reference ranges for the following
analytes.
|
US Units
|
SI Units
|
Creatinine
|
0.8 – 1.5 mg/dL
|
70 – 132 µmol/L
|
Hematocrit
|
35-47% (w) 40-52% (m)
|
0.35-0.47 (w) 0.40-0.52 (m)
|
Total protein
|
63 – 79 g/L
|
63 – 79 g/L
|
Cholesterol
|
150-250 mg/dL
|
5.7 – 9.4 mmol/L
|
Triglycerides
|
50-150 mg/dL
|
0.56 – 2.83 mmol/L
|
- A portion of the whole blood sample should be centrifuged and the plasma removed.
- Divide the remaining blood sample into three aliquots. Adjust
an aliquot of whole blood to low (~20 to 30 percent) and another
aliquot to high (~55 to 65 percent) hematocrit by addition or removal
of plasma. The actual low and high hematocrit to be evaluated should be
determined based on the hematocrit reportable range claimed for the
device. Retain the third blood aliquot at the unadjusted hematocrit
level.
- The actual hematocrit value should be determined for each sample by microcentrifugation.
- Divide each blood sample, representing each of the three
hematocrits, into three more aliquots. Adjust two of these aliquots to
mid- and high-creatinine concentrations (see note below). The high
target concentration should be approximately –10 percent from the
highest concentration claimed by the manufacturer for their device.
Retain the third aliquot at the unadjusted creatinine concentration.
Two additional intermediate concentrations should be prepared by
admixture of the unadjusted, mid- and high-creatinine blood samples.
Note: Samples
should be supplemented by addition of a concentrated stock solution of
creatinine based on estimated water content of the whole blood sample,
not the entire volume of whole blood.
Water content of blood sample (mL) = [(0.71 * Hct) + (0.93 * (1-Hct))] * vol. of blood (mL)
where: 0.71 = normal red blood cell water content in kg/L
0.93 = normal plasma water content in kg/L
- After spiking, the plasma concentration of samples that are
supplemented with creatinine may continue to change over a period of
time as the molality of the plasma and erythrocyte phases approach
equality. This process requires approximately five hours at room
temperature.6 If desired, the plasma
concentration of creatinine from samples that have been spiked with
creatinine may be measured as a function of time to determine how much
time is required to reach equilibrium. These measurements can be done
at the highest hematocrit only, which should require the longest time.
Allow sufficient time after sample spiking before continuing with the
assays.
- After adjustment of hematocrit and sample spiking to elevated
creatinine concentrations, blood samples will be available according to
the matrix below.
|
Percent of Hematocrit
|
Creatinine Conc. mg/dL
|
|
20-30
|
Not adjusted
|
55-65
|
Not adjusted (Normal)
|
|
|
|
Normal-mid
|
|
|
|
Mid
|
|
|
|
Mid-High
|
|
|
|
High
|
|
|
|
- Split each blood sample into two portions. One portion should
be centrifuged and the plasma removed and the other portion kept as
whole blood.
- The 15 blood samples should be analyzed on the whole blood
measurement device in random order, with the number of replicates per
sample determined using the known imprecision of the whole blood
measurement device. See Table 1 in the Appendix.7
More than one whole blood measurement device may be included in this
phase of the protocol, at the discretion of the manufacturer.
- The 15 plasma samples should be assayed using an
IDMS-traceable method in random order. Data from the isotope dilution
mass spectrometry (IDMS)-traceable method should be normalized to
creatinine in NIST Standard Reference Material (SRM) 967. The number of
replicates per sample should be equal to the number of replicates for
the corresponding whole blood sample.8
- Calculate mean and standard deviation for each set of
measurements. The means of the determinations by the whole blood
and plasma methods for the unspiked sample should be within the
bias limits given in Table 1 of the Appendix, at each hematocrit level,
for a given whole blood imprecision.
- If the required agreement is not obtained, the results from
the two methods should be analyzed by linear regression, at each level
of hematocrit, using the means of the whole blood results as the
“y” value and the means of the plasma results as the
“x” value. The resulting slope and intercept should be
adjusted to one and zero, respectively, to force agreement between the
two methods. This correction may then be made to subsequent whole
blood results, in software, based on the slope and intercept
adjustments.
corrected “y” = [(1/slope) (uncorrected “y”)] + [(0 – intercept)/slope]
The slope and intercept may vary as
a function of hematocrit. A secondary correction to slope and intercept
based on measured hematocrit should be included, if necessary.9
- Verification of agreement with an IDMS-traceable plasma method using patient samples
Patient specimens should be used to
verify the above standardization procedure. It is recommended that at
least 5 different whole blood creatinine measurement devices be used as
part of this verification protocol in order to show device-to-device
consistency.
- At minimum, 40 heparinized blood samples from hospitalized
patients, chosen to span the measured range for creatinine as
thoroughly as possible, should be included.
- Each sample should be divided in two parts. One part should
be centrifuged and the plasma extracted and the other part retained as
whole blood.
- Each blood specimen should be assayed in duplicate (at a
minimum) on the whole blood device. The duplication is necessary to
improve the imprecision of the estimate and may aid in determining if
any measurements should be discarded as outliers.
- Each plasma sample should be assayed in duplicate (at a minimum) using an IDMS-traceable method, normalized to NIST SRM 967.
- Perform regression analysis on the data using the means of
the whole blood results as the “y” or dependent variable
and the means of the plasma results as the “x” or
independent variable.
- Using CLSI Document EP9-A2 as a guide, determine if any
points should be excluded as outliers and compute the average bias
between the two methods. Any points discarded as outliers should be
further investigated.
- Determine if the whole blood measurement device meets the
NKDEP guidelines for agreement to the IDMS traceable method, especially
in the creatinine concentration range of 1.0 – 1.5 mg/dL.

Figure 1:
Total error budget for creatinine measurement in the range 88.4-133
µmol/L (1.00-1.50 mg/dL). The line represents the limit of
systematic biases and random imprecisions that produce a relative
increase of less than 10 percent in the root mean squared error when
estimating GFR using the MDRD Study equation. Adapted from: Myers
et al. Recommendations for Improving Serum Creatinine Measurement: A
Report from the Laboratory Working Group of the National Kidney Disease
Education Program. Clinical Chemistry. 2006;52:5-18.
Table 1: Number of
replicates required based on the targeted agreement between the whole
blood and IDMS-traceable methods and the known imprecision of the whole
blood method (derived from Figure 1).
Known within run standard deviation of the whole blood method (mg/dL)
|
Targeted bias between whole blood and IDMS-traceable plasma method (mg/dL)
|
Number of replicates required to detect targeted bias
|
0.09
|
-0.045>x<0.035
|
52
|
0.08
|
-0.06>x<0.05
|
21
|
0.07
|
-0.075>x<0.06
|
11
|
0.06
|
-0.085>x<0.07
|
6
|
0.05
|
-0.095>x<0.075
|
4
|
0.04
|
-0.10>x<0.08
|
2
|
References and Endnotes
- ISO 17511. In vitro diagnostic medical
devices – measurement of quantities in biological samples –
metrological traceability of values assigned to calibrators and control
materials. International Organization for Standardization, 2003.
- http://www.bipm.org/jctlm/
- Miller BF, Dubos R. The Journal of Biological Chemistry. 1937;121:457-64.
- Nolph K, Felts J, Moore R, Van Stone J. International Urology and Nephrology. 1978;10:59-64.
- Langsdorf LJ, Zydney AL. Biotechnology and Bioengineering. 1994;43:115-21.
- D’Orazio P, Conant J, Cervera
J. Measurement of creatinine in whole blood samples supplemented
to achieve elevated creatinine concentrations. Clinical Chemistry, 2008;54:451-2.
- If the required degree of replication
is excessive (e.g., 21 or greater), the suggested number of replicates
from the Appendix may be run with the unadjusted, normal creatinine
samples only, with a lesser degree of replication at the elevated
creatinine concentrations.
- Because the IDMS-traceable method is
normalized using NIST SRM 967, it is assumed that the imprecision of
the method will be equal to or better than the whole blood method.
- Most devices that measure whole blood
creatinine include a simultaneously measured hematocrit to allow for
this correction. If total hemoglobin is reported instead, hematocrit
may be estimated (Hct = tHb x 3).
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