Improvement of Blood Samples Preanalytic Management Alters the Clinical Results of Glucose Values: Population Study

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Abstract

Background: Prolonged time elapsing between the blood drawing and separation of the cell mass may result in decreased sample glucose levels due to continuous glycolysis. This can lead to underdiagnoses of hyperglycemic states and overdiagnosis of hypoglycemia. We aimed to evaluate the clinical impact of shortened transit time and earlier centrifugation of laboratory specimens on reported glucose results and diagnosis of clinically significant hypoglycemia (<50 mg/dL) or elevated glucose levels (>100 mg/dL). Methods: We assessed all fasting-serum glucose tests from the adult population (190 767 subjects) without known diabetes residing in Southern Israel. Before and after intervention periods were compared: 268 359 blood tests were performed during 2009-2010, and 317 336 during 2012-2013. Results: While glucose levels were 94.17 mg/dL ± 14.12 in 2012-2013 versus 83.53 mg/dL ± 14.50 in 2009-2010 (12.75% ± 0.88 increase, P

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Codish, S., Amichay, D., Yitshak-Sade, M., Gat, R., Liberty, I. F., & Novack, L. (2020). Improvement of Blood Samples Preanalytic Management Alters the Clinical Results of Glucose Values: Population Study. Journal of Diabetes Science and Technology, 14(2), 284–289. https://doi.org/10.1177/1932296818823780

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