Coffee intake one hour prior to phlebotomy produces no clinically significant changes in routine biochemical test results

Author:

Pennacchiotti Graciela L1,Campion Amparo1,Milano Pablo G1,Benozzi Silvia F1,Unger Gisela1

Affiliation:

1. Departamento de Biología, Bioquímica y Farmacia, Universidad Nacional del Sur (UNS), Bahía Blanca, Argentina

Abstract

IntroductionAlthough current guidelines recommend not drinking coffee prior to phlebotomy, our hypothesis is that drinking coffee does not affect the clinical interpretation of biochemical and haematological test results. Materials and methodsTwenty-seven volunteers were studied in basal state (T0) and 1h after (T1) drinking coffee. Routine haematological (Sysmex-XN1000 analyser) and biochemistry parameters (Vitros 4600 analyser) were studied. Results were compared using the Wilcoxon test (P < 0.05). A clinical change was considered when mean percent difference (MD%) was higher than the reference change value (RCV). ResultsCoffee intake produced statistically, but not clinically, significant: i) increases in haemoglobin (P = 0.009), mean cell haemoglobin concentration (P = 0.044), neutrophils (P = 0.001), albumin (P = 0.001), total protein (P = 0.000), cholesterol (P = 0.025), high density lipoprotein cholesterol (P = 0.007), uric acid (P = 0.011), calcium (P = 0.001), potassium (P = 0.010), aspartate aminotransferase (P = 0.001), amylase (P = 0.026), and lactate dehydrogenase (P = 0.001), and ii) decreases in mean cell volume (P = 0.002), red cell distribution width (P = 0.001), eosinophils (P = 0.002), and lymphocytes (P = 0.001), creatinine (P = 0.001), total bilirubin (P = 0.012), phosphorus (P = 0.001), magnesium (P = 0.007), and chloride (P = 0.001). ConclusionDrinking a cup of coffee 1 hour prior to phlebotomy produces no clinically significant changes in routine biochemical and haematological test results.

Publisher

Croatian Society for Medical Biochemistry and Laboratory Medicine

Subject

Biochemistry (medical),Clinical Biochemistry

Reference28 articles.

1. Joint EFLM-COLABIOCLI recommendation for venous blood sampling.;Simundic;Clin Chem Lab Med,2018

2. Institute of Medicine, Food and Nutrition Board. Committee on Military Nutrition Research. Caffeine for the Sustainment of Mental Task National Academies Press, 2001. Available from: http://www.nap.edu/catalog/10219.html. Accessed May 5th 2022.

3. Influence of diet and sample collection time on 77 laboratory tests on healthy adults.;Plumelle;Clin Biochem,2014

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