False Laboratory Test Result Through Colistin Interference in an Intensive Care Patient: Case Report.

2020 
BACKGROUND: In blood samples taken for testing purpose during drug infusion in the intensive care unit, there is a risk of interference due to drug-reactive interaction during the analysis. CASE REPORT: A 19-year-old female patient had undergone surgery for intracranial astrocytoma 12 years previously. Acinetobacter baumannii was found in the blood culture and deep tracheal aspiration fluid of the patient who had a fever (39.2 ° C) with a body temperature during the followup. The patient was started on colistin 2 * 4.5 million IU. After the colistin infusion, biochemical tests were requested to control the patient's clinical situation. CK-MB mass and ProBNP values were measured in high concentrations. A cardiology consultation was requested to evaluate the increase in the CK-MB mass and ProBNP values. The patient's ECG and echocardiography showed no abnormality. The increase in cardiac markers was neither clinically acceptable nor insignificant. There was no hemolysis in the sample or analytical error in the device. Variability in the tests was thought to be due to interference. As the bloodletting time was questioned, it was determined that it was taken during colistin treatment. In order to determine the effect of colistin-related interference on the other tests, the laboratory was contacted and additional tests (TSH, FT4, Anti-TPO, B-HCG, Estradiol, Prolactin, CA 125, CA 15-3, CA 19-9, Vitamin B12, C-Peptide, D-Dimer, PTH, 25 hydroxy vitamin D, PT, INR, APTT) were conducted. During colistin treatment, in many tests, bias was detected between -75 and + 268.80%. CONCLUSION: Clinicians should consider in suspicious test results that are incompatible with the diagnosis the possibility of erroneous measurements due to colistin interference and review the sampling processes.
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