Accuracy of the HemoCue® to measure cell-free plasma hemoglobin and detect clinically significant hemolysis
Monitoring cell-free plasma hemoglobin (PHb) during extracorporeal therapies allows early intervention of significant hemolysis, but timely measurements are often challenging. We thus present an analysis of a rapid benchtop device's ability to detect clinically significant hemolysis (PHb ≥50 mg...
Gespeichert in:
Veröffentlicht in: | Perfusion 2024-10, p.2676591241292674 |
---|---|
Hauptverfasser: | , , , , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Tags: |
Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
|
Zusammenfassung: | Monitoring cell-free plasma hemoglobin (PHb) during extracorporeal therapies allows early intervention of significant hemolysis, but timely measurements are often challenging. We thus present an analysis of a rapid benchtop device's ability to detect clinically significant hemolysis (PHb ≥50 mg/dL).
PHb was measured in 419 plasma samples from 88 pediatric patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass via both the benchtop device (HemoCue® Plasma/Low Hb system) and the clinical laboratory at the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh (reference standards). Values of PHb ≥50 mg/dL as measured by the reference standard was defined as the binary outcome of clinically significant hemolysis. Analyses included Pearson correlations, logistic regression, receiver operating characteristic curves, and Bland-Altman. Because the manufacturer specifications identify the measurement range of the HemoCue® system as 30-3000 mg/dL, a secondary analysis was completed using PHb ≥30 mg/dL.
Using reference measurements, 66/88 subjects had at least one PHb level that fell within the range of detection (≥30 mg/dL) of the benchtop device and 46/88 had significant hemolysis as defined by PHb ≥50 mg/dL. PHb levels ≥30 mg/dL largely correlated with measurements made with the benchtop device (r = 0.82,
< .001). The device was able to predict PHb values ≥30 mg/dL (AUROC 0.9582) and ≥50 mg/dL (AUROC 0.9637). The Bland-Altman demonstrated a mean difference of 7.0 mg/dL with |
---|---|
ISSN: | 0267-6591 1477-111X 1477-111X |
DOI: | 10.1177/02676591241292674 |