Data mining of pediatric reference intervals

Zierk J, Metzler M, Rauh M (2021)


Publication Type: Journal article, Review article

Publication year: 2021

Journal

Article Number: A172

DOI: 10.1515/labmed-2021-0120

Abstract

Laboratory tests are essential to assess the health status and to guide patient care in individuals of all ages. The interpretation of quantitative test results requires availability of appropriate reference intervals, and reference intervals in children have to account for the extensive physiological dynamics with age in many biomarkers. Creation of reference intervals using conventional approaches requires the sampling of healthy individuals, which is opposed by ethical and practical considerations in children, due to the need for a large number of blood samples from healthy children of all ages, including neonates and young infants. This limits the availability and quality of pediatric reference intervals, and ultimately negatively impacts pediatric clinical decision-making. Data mining approaches use laboratory test results and clinical information from hospital information systems to create reference intervals. The extensive number of available test results from laboratory information systems and advanced statistical methods enable the creation of pediatric reference intervals with an unprecedented age-related accuracy for children of all ages. Ongoing developments regarding the availability and standardization of electronic medical records and of indirect statistical methods will further improve the benefit of data mining for pediatric reference intervals.

Authors with CRIS profile

How to cite

APA:

Zierk, J., Metzler, M., & Rauh, M. (2021). Data mining of pediatric reference intervals. Journal of Laboratory Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1515/labmed-2021-0120

MLA:

Zierk, Jakob, Markus Metzler, and Manfred Rauh. "Data mining of pediatric reference intervals." Journal of Laboratory Medicine (2021).

BibTeX: Download