Abstract
We report a man in his 70s who presented with discrepant serum creatinine concentrations in different hospitals at the same time. Further examinations of these discrepancies revealed turbidity of the serum sample and, thus, a reagent reaction and false hypercreatinine caused by paraprotein interference were suspected. Serum protein electrophoresis revealed a small amount of monoclonal γ globulin (2.9 g/L), which may have been involved in paraprotein interference. Monoclonal λ-type IgG was detected in the serum, resulting in a diagnosis of monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. Previous studies indicated paraprotein interference in serum containing monoclonal IgM or a large amount of IgG (> 25 g/L). Although this case of paraprotein interference induced by a small amount of IgG is rare, a discrepancy in creatinine results may be an indicator leading to the diagnosis of plasma cell proliferative diseases.