Journal Article
Observational Study
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Discrepancies in corrected calcium versus ionised calcium in a geriatric population: an observational study.

Age and Ageing 2024 April 2
BACKGROUND: Calcium can be measured as ionised (Ca-ionised) or albumin-adjusted total calcium (Ca-albumin). Current clinical guidelines predominantly utilise Ca-albumin, despite Ca-ionised being the gold standard. Discrepancies can occur between these measurement modalities and can lead to clinical dilemmas. It remains unclear how large these discrepancies are in older patients. This study investigated the discrepancies between Ca-ionised and Ca-albumin in geriatric patients.

METHODS: This is an observational study of all geriatric patients (n = 876) in the Jeroen Bosch Hospital (January 2018 and January 2021) in whom both Ca-ionised and Ca-albumin were measured. Misclassification of calcaemic state (i.e. low, normal or high) was calculated (percentages), the measure of agreement was described using Cohen's Kappa and for the continuous data Pearson's correlation coefficient was used. Relevant categories of age and renal function were considered for effect modification effects and studied by interaction terms in a regression model.

RESULTS: In one-third of the measurements, there was a misclassification. Ca-albumin measurements failed to identify 28% of hypocalcaemia. In 3.5%, hypercalcemia based on Ca-albumin was not confirmed by Ca-ionised. The correlation coefficient between Ca-ionised and Ca-albumin was 0.743 (P = 0.01) and measure of agreement by Kappa was 0.213 (P < 0.001). In the oldest old (≥ 85 years) and patients with eGFR <30 ml/min/1.73 m2 ,the agreement by Kappa was lower, with values of 0.192 and 0.104, respectively.

CONCLUSION: There is a discrepancy between Ca-albumin and Ca-ionised in one-third of the geriatric patients, leading to clinical dilemmas. In the oldest old and patients with renal dysfunction, this problem is most pronounced.

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