Immunohaematological reference values for HIV-negative healthy adults in Botswana

Author:

Mine Madisa,Moyo Sikhulile,Stevens Penny,Michael Kurt,Novitsky Vladimir,Makhaola Kgomotso,Asmelash Aida,Molefhabangwe S’khatele,Woldegabriel Elias,Mothowaeng Gaseboloke,Maruta Talkmore,Kamhukamwe Charity,Mangwendeza Phibeon M.,Holmes-Pretorius Molly,Mtoni Isaac,Motswaledi Modisa,Musonda Rosemary,Ndwapi Ndwapi,Makhema Joseph,Marlink Richard,Seipone Khumo,Gaolathe Tendani,Essex Max

Abstract

Background: Clinical laboratories in Botswana have relied entirely on the reference intervals for normal immunohaematological values provided by manufacturers’ kits and textbooks. Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine the means, medians, 2.5th and 97.5th percentile reference intervals, for normal immunohaematological values in healthy adults in Botswana.Method: A total of 261 healthy participants comprising 126 men (48%) and 135 (52%) women were enrolled in the southern part of Botswana, and immunological and haematological laboratory parameters were measured.Results: The mean age was 28.8 (95% Confidence Interval [CI] 27.7–29.8) years, with a median of 27 years and a range 18–66 years. The mean haemoglobin level was significantly lower for women (12.4 g/dL; 95% CI 12.1% – 12.7%) than men (15.1 g/dL; 95% CI 14.9% – 15.3%). The women’s haemoglobin reference values (9.0 g/dL – 15.0 g/dL) levels were lower than observed in predominantly White populations (12.0 g/dL – 16.0 g/dL), but comparable with regional consensus reference intervals (9.5 g/dL – 15.8 g/dL) recently defined for East and Southern Africa.Conclusion: The established values provide an important tool for patient management and could influence decisions on inclusion of participants and adverse events in clinical trials conducted locally.

Publisher

AOSIS

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Medical Laboratory Technology,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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