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Reference Intervals for Coagulation Parameters in Developmental Hemostasis from Infancy to Adolescence

Giovina Di Felice, Matteo Vidali, Gelsomina Parisi, Simona Pezzi, Alessandra Di Pede, Giulia Deidda, Matteo D’Agostini, Michaela Carletti, Stefano Ceccarelli, Ottavia Porzio

2022Diagnostics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: The objective of this study was to establish the age and sex-dependent reference intervals for coagulation assays evaluated in healthy children, ranging from 0 days to 16 years old. Methods: PT, aPTT, Fibrinogen (functional), Antithrombin activity, Protein C anticoagulant activity, Protein S free antigen, Thrombin time, D-Dimer, Von Willebrand Factor antigen, Lupus anticoagulant (screening), extrinsic and intrinsic pathway factors, and activated Protein C resistance were evaluated using STA-R Max2. Results: A total of 1280 subjects (671 males and 609 females) were divided into five groups, according to their age: 0–15 days (n = 280, 174 M and 106 F), 15–30 days (n = 208, 101 M and 107 F), 1–6 months (n = 369, 178 M and 191 F), 6–12 months (n = 214, 110 M and 104 F), and 1–16 years (n = 209, 108 M and 101 F). The 95% reference intervals and the 90% CI were established using the Harrell–Davis bootstrap method and the bootstrap percentile method, respectively. Conclusions: The present study supports the concept that adult and pediatric subjects should be evaluated using different reference intervals, at least for some coagulation tests, to avoid misdiagnosis, which can potentially lead to serious consequences for patients and their families, and ultimately the healthcare system.

Topics & Concepts

AntithrombinMedicineHemostasisFibrinogenPercentileCoagulationProtein CProtein SThrombin timeInternal medicineVon Willebrand factorGastroenterologyPartial thromboplastin timePediatricsHeparinPlateletMathematicsStatisticsBlood Coagulation and Thrombosis MechanismsHemophilia Treatment and ResearchBlood properties and coagulation