Multi-wavelength spectrophotometric analysis for detection of xanthochromia in cerebrospinal fluid and accuracy for the diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage

A Smith, AHB Wu, KL Lynch, N Ko, DG Grenache - Clinica Chimica Acta, 2013 - Elsevier
A Smith, AHB Wu, KL Lynch, N Ko, DG Grenache
Clinica Chimica Acta, 2013Elsevier
Background Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was examined for bilirubin, an important indicator for
diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH). Methods A multi-wavelength (340, 415, and
460 nm) spectrophotometric assay was developed for the quantitative measurement of
bilirubin in CSF, enabling the mathematical correction for absorbance of hemoglobin and
proteins. Bilirubin and hemoglobin results were correlated to HPLC and a standard
colorimetric assay, respectively. A subset of samples was sent for an absorbance reading at …
Background
Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was examined for bilirubin, an important indicator for diagnosis of subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH).
Methods
A multi-wavelength (340, 415, and 460 nm) spectrophotometric assay was developed for the quantitative measurement of bilirubin in CSF, enabling the mathematical correction for absorbance of hemoglobin and proteins. Bilirubin and hemoglobin results were correlated to HPLC and a standard colorimetric assay, respectively. A subset of samples was sent for an absorbance reading at 450 nm following baseline correction. The multi-wavelength bilirubin assay was validated on 70 patients with confirmed SAH and 70 patients with neurologic symptoms who ruled out for SAH.
Results
The multi-wavelength spectrophometric assay demonstrated no interferences due to proteins (albumin) up to 30 g/l or oxyhemoglobin up to 260 mg/l. The assay limit of detection was 0.2 mg/l, linear to 20 mg/l, and CVs ranged from 1 to 6% at bilirubin concentrations of 0.84 and 2.1 mg/l. The spectrophotometric assay correlated to HPLC and the colorimetric assay for bilirubin and hemoglobin, respectively. Results also correlated to the absorbance method (with removal of samples with high hemoglobin and proteins). The area under the ROC curve for diagnosis of SAH was 0.971 and 0.954 for the HPLC and spectrophotometric assay, respectively. At a cutoff of 0.2 mg/l, the clinical specificity was 100% for both assays, and the clinical sensitivity was 94.3% and 88.6% for SAH for the HPLC and spectrophotometric asays, respectively.
Conclusions
The multi-wavelength spectrophotometric assay is an objective alternative to visual inspection, HPLC, and absorbance for CSF bilirubin.
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