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Project
number 2001-059-1-700:
PROPERTIES AND UNITS FOR TRANSFUSION MEDICINE AND IMMUNOHAEMATOLOGY
(Technical report) (IFCC-IUPAC 2003)
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Prepared for publication by
KIM VARMING1, URBAN FORSUM2, IVAN BRUUNSHUUS3,
and HENRIK OLESEN3
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Dept. Clin. Immunology, Aalborg University Hospital,
Aalborg, Denmark
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Div. Clin. Microbiology, Link�ping University, Link�ping,
Sweden
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The National Board of Health , Copenhagen S,
Denmark
#The combined Membership of the IFCC Committee during the
preparation of this report (2001- 2002) was as follows:
Chairman: U. Forsum (Sweden). Members: P. Soares de Araujo
(Brazil; 1994- ); R. Dybk�r (Denmark; 1996- ); A. Jabor (Czech
Republic; 1998- ); W. R. K�lpmann (Germany; 1998- ); G. Nordin
(Sweden; 2000-
�The combined Memberships of the Task Group during the
preparation of this report (2001-2002) was as follows:
Chairman: U. Forsum (Sweden). Members: P. Soares de Araujo
(Brazil); R. Dybk�r (Denmark); A. Jabor (Czech Republic); G. Nordin
(Sweden) and W. K�lpmann (Germany)
Please forward comments to:
K. Varming, Dept. Clin. Immunology, Aalborg University Hospital,
Postbox 561, DK-9100 Aalborg, Denmark; e-mail: varming@aas.nja.dk
--> Full List
of Terms Here <--
Synopsis
This document is part of an ongoing effort to standardize
transmission of laboratory data across cultural and linguistic
domains, without attempting to standardize the routine language
used by clinicians and laboratory practitioners.
It comprises a general introduction, and an alphabetic list of
properties. The list is based on the syntax for properties
recommended by the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry
and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC) and the International Union of Pure
and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) [1]. The nomenclature is primarily
from the Working Party on Terminology of the International Society
of Blood Transfusion (ISBT) [2-5].
General
introduction
The purpose of this document is to create a systematic
terminology, that can be used as the basis for encoding laboratory
messages in the domain of transfusion medicine and
immunohaematology. The systematic terms and unique codes for
properties recommended for scientific communication and in requests
and reports are primarily for the purpose of unambiguous data
exchange. Their use by clinicians or laboratory practitioners is
optional but encouraged.
Syntax and
definitions
syntax: System(specification)�Component(specification);
kind-of-property(specification) = (x).(x) [1].
EXAMPLES: NPU21943 Neutrophilocytes(Blood)�Immunoglobulin A;
arbitrary entitic number(procedure) = ? arbitrary unit
NPU01945 Erythrocytes(Blood)�Erythrocyte antigen; taxon(AB0;
RhD; procedure) = ?
system: demarcated arrangement of a set of elements and a set of
relationships between these elements [6]
EXAMPLE: a portion of blood, a portion of plasma, a portion of
erythrocytes.
component:definable part of a system [6]
EXAMPLE: Erythrocyte A antibody as part of a plasma sample.
kind of property: attribute of phenomena, bodies or substances
that may be distinguished qualitatively[6]
NOTE 1 - In ENV 1614 the term property (in a general sense) is
used as synonym for kind-of-property[6].
NOTE 2 - A kind of property may be qualified by each user to
nominal scale, ordinal scale, difference scale or ratio scale. The
last three types of kind-of-property are also called
kind-of-quantity.
compatibility :mutual tolerance
NOTE 1 - There is presently no officially approved definition.
The definition for this kind-of-property is for use in this
document only.
EXAMPLE: NPU21410 Plasma B-lymphocyte antibody;
compatibility(donationID; absent present) = ?
nominal scale:scale with a set of possible values for a given
kind-of-property that are each a word or symbol without any
relation to magnitude [1]
EXAMPLE: taxon of erythrocyte antigen in a sample of blood
identified as BARC; Cra.
NOTE - The values may be listed in any order according to
practical considerations and convention.
ordinal scale:scale with an ordered set of possible values for a
given kind-of-quantity that are each a word or symbol used for
ranking according to magnitude, but where differences or ratios
between values have no arithmetic meaning [1]
EXAMPLE: arbitrary number of Immunoglobulin M molecules(median)
per erythrocyte in a sample of blood found as �0� or �1�; or
�absent� or �present�; or �negative� or �positive�.
ratio scale:scale of measurement with an ordered set of values
for a given kind of measurable quantity that are each a product of
numerical value and unit of measurement such that a given ratio
between values corresponds to the ratio between magnitudes of the
measurable quantities along the scale [1]
EXAMPLE: entitic number of immunoglobulin A molecules(median)
per thrombocyte in a sample of thrombocytes.
list of related properties: some requests elicit a series of
related properties that may be grouped under a common heading in a
report. The heading is for requesting and the list of properties
presented is for selection by the individual laboratory
EXAMPLE: NPU21970 P�HNA antibody(IgM); arb.c.(list; 0 1)
NPU21971 P�HNA-1a antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 0
NPU21972 P�HNA-1b antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 0
NPU21973 P�HNA-1c antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 0
NPU21974 P�HNA-2a antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 1
NPU21975 P�HNA-3a antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 0
NPU21976 P�HNA-4a antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 0
NPU21977 P�HNA-5a antibody(IgM); arb.c. = 0
Alternatively the request and report in these cases may be
reduced to a single entry using the kind-of-property taxon and
nominal results if the actual list of properties looked for in the
procedure is part of the general information from the
laboratory.
EXAMPLE: NPU21924 P�HNA antibody(IgM); taxon = HNA-2a
designation of property:set of data elements comprising
information on system, component and kind-of-property and their
adherent specifications.
NOTE 1 - There is presently no officially approved definition.
This definition is for use in this document only.
NOTE 2 - Information about identification of system, time and
result is not considered in the entries of this document.
EXAMPLE: Lymphocytes(Blood)�B-lymphocytes(immature); number
fraction.
International Coding Scheme Identifier, ICSI: identifier
assigned to uniquely identify a registered coding scheme for use in
information interchange [7]
EXAMPLE: �NPU� for codes allocated by the C-NPU of the
IFCC-IUPAC.
code value :result of applying a coding scheme to an element in
a coded set [7]
EXAMPLE of number and term: 21406 for
Blood�Crossmatch(electronic); expiry(date and hour;
procedure)�.
Systematic Request
and Report of Clinical Laboratory Results
The parts comprised in the concept of �term of property� and in
the concept of �term of a result� are presented in table 1.
By convention, properties and results of examinations are
connected through an operator.
- Parts 1 and 2 are Essential for a request; that is information
on patient identification, time or time interval for sampling, and
information on the property requested.
- The laboratory report on a particular property comprises the
three parts 1, 2 and 3.
- To each element in part 2 may be added a specification as a
parenthetic suffix for clarification and to avoid ambiguity.
- Note(s) (part 4) relating to, for example, diagnosis,
medication, haemolysis or hardware breakdown are not included,
except when needed for the interpretation of results such as
pretreatment of patient or subject.
- Thus the elements of a term for a type of property comprise:
System(specification)�Component(specification);
kind-of-property(specification in the form of procedural
details).
- This is as recommended by IFCC and IUPAC [1] and by the
European standard ENV 1614:1995 [6].
- EXAMPLE: Erythrocytes(Blood)� Erythrocyte antigen; taxon(AB0;
RhD; procedure).
- The elements of a result comprise: an operator (= < >
etc.), a numerical value and any unit or name, usually in symbolic
form. This is as recommended by the European standard ENV
12435:1996 [8].
- Nominal and ordinal scale values carry no unit. In difference
and ratio scales the unit must never be omitted in reporting
results, except for the unit 1.
- It is further recommended that the result includes or refers to
a value for a measure of uncertainty [8].
- The names of components are primarily from the Working Party of
the International Society of Blood Transfusion [2, 3, 4, 5].
- In addition to the systematic term of the property, an example
is given in abbreviated format..
For details, see IUPAC�IFCC (Recommendations 1995). Syntax and
semantic rules [9].
Elements of an
Entry
The terms recommended are given in bold, that is: the systematic
term for the type of property, the unit and the code value.
- Name of system and parenthetic specification spelled out in
full, and followed by a long dash (em dash)
- Alphanumeric chemical prefixes to component name
- Recommended name of component and parenthetic specification
Shifted to the left for alphabetical sorting and searching, and
followed by a semicolon
- Kind-of-property and parenthetic specification
- Unit
- Molar mass (M) for conversion from other units
- Presently recommended calibrator
- Previous calibrator(s)
- Other term(s)
- Authority: Code value for the international organisation
recommending the name of the component or the combined elements of
an entry
- Note with any further information
- [NPUXXXXX]. Code value, intended for interlaboratory
transmission between databases
- Example in abbreviated form
The term �arbitrary� in principle cannot be related to a volume.
In clinical chemistry, however, a less well defined �in-house� or a
regional calibrator is often referred to and is expressed in
�arbitrary unit per litre� in order to enable comparison of patient
data over time and regionally. In each of these instances further
information should be given in the parenthesis �procedure�
In the examples given, a question mark, �?�, has been used to
represent the value of a result for properties including
quantities.
EXAMPLE
- Erythrocytes(Blood)�
- none
- Complement + Immunoglobulin;
- arbitrary entitic number(procedure)
- arbitrary unit
- none
- none
- none
- Other term(s): Coombs test
- none
- none
- NPU20001
- Ercs(B)�Complement + Immunoglobulin; arb.entitic num. = ?
arb.unit
References
- IUPAC�IFCC (International Union of Pure and Applied
Chemistry�International Federation of Clinical Chemistry),
Commission/Committee on Quantities and Units (in Clinical
Chemistry), 1995. Compendium of terminology and nomenclature of
properties in clinical laboratory sciences. The Silver Book. JC
Rigg, SS Brown, R Dybkaer, H Olesen. Oxford: Blackwell Science, 290
pp.
- ISBT Working Party on Terminology for Red Cell Surface
Antigens. Terminology for red cell surface antigens. Blood group
terminology. Prepared for publication by Geoff Daniels September
2000. http://www.iccbba.com/wpantigentables.htm
- ISBT Working Party on Platelet and Granulocyte Serology,
Granulocyte Antigen Working Party. Nomenclature of Granulocyte
Alloantigens. Prepared for publication by J Bux. Vox Sang.. 1999;
77:251
- International Society for Thrombosis and Haemostasis(ISTH) and
International Society of Blood Transfusion (ISBT). Human Platelet
Alloantigens (HPA). Institute for Clinical Immunology and
Transfusion Medicine, Justus Liebig University Giessen, Germany 20
November 2002 http://www.med.uni-giessen.de/immunologie/Forschungsschwerpunkte.htm
- The Anthony Nolan Trust. HLA Informatics Group. 19 July 2002 http://www.anthonynolan.org.uk/HIG/nomenc.html
- CEN/TC 251,1995. European Prestandard ENV 1614. Medical
informatics. Structure for nomenclature, classification and coding
of properties in clinical laboratory sciences
- International Organization for Standardization. International
Standard ISO/IEC7826-1:1994 Information technology � General
structure for the interchange of code values � Part 1:
Identification of coding schemes
- CEN/TC 251, 1996. European Prestandard ENV 12435:1996. Medical
Informatics. Expression of the results of measurement in health
sciences
- Syntax and semantic rules. Prepared for publication by H
Olesen. Pure Appl. Chem. 1995; 67: 1563-74; Eur. J. Clin. Chem.
Clin. Biochem. 1995; 33: 627-36; Clin. Chim. Acta 1996; 245:
S5-S21.
Index of
Abbreviations
C-NPU Commission on Nomenclature, Properties and Units
IFCC International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and
Laboratory Medicine
ISBT International Society of Blood Transfusion
IUPAC International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry
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