Abstract

Information regarding the performance of the i-STAT, a point-of-care analyzer, to determine ionized calcium (iCa2+ ) concentration in bovine blood is limited. The primary goal of this study was to evaluate the agreement of the i-STAT against a traditional bench-top blood gas analyzer (Radiometer ABL800 FLEX) in the measurement of iCa2+ in the blood of cattle with various disorders. In this study, 121 cattle with various diseases were used. Venous blood samples were run on the i-STAT and the Radiometer ABL800 FLEX for determination of blood iCa2+ concentrations. Data were subjected to Passing-Bablok regression and Bland-Altman plots. The Radiometer ABL800 FLEX was the reference method and the i-STAT was the test method. The i-STAT performance was evaluated at two different cutoff values for iCa2+ concentrations (<1.00 and <1.18mmol/L) using the receiver operating characteristic curve. The Passing-Bablok regression equation that fit the iCa2+ concentration as measured with the i-STAT (Y) and the Radiometer ABL800 FLEX (X), was Y=-0.108276 [-0.15/-0.06]+1.103448 [1.06/1.14]×X, with a residual deviation of 0.02. The deviation from the identity line was not significant (P=0.64). The Bland-Altman difference plot revealed no bias between the i-STAT and the Radiometer ABL 800 FLEX. The i-STAT had a sensitivity of 100% (95% CI, 87.7-100.0) and 94.8% (95% CI, 87.2-98.6) at the iCa2+ concentration cutoff values of <1.00 and <1.18mmol/L, respectively. iCa2+ concentrations in bovine blood measured with the i-STAT agreed with those of the Radiometer ABL800 FLEX. In particular, the i-STAT predicted hypocalcemia with a high sensitivity.

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