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Age- And Sex-Related Variations in Platelet Count in Italy: A Proposal of Reference Ranges Based on 40987 Subjects' Data
Author(s) -
Ginevra Biino,
Iolanda Santimone,
Cosetta Minelli,
Rossella Sorice,
Bruno Frongia,
Michela Traglia,
Sheila Ulivi,
Augusto Di Castelnuovo,
Martin Gögele,
Teresa Nutile,
Marcella Francavilla,
Cinzia Sala,
Nicola Pirastu,
Chiara Cerletti,
Licia Iacoviello,
Paolo Gasparini,
Daniela Toniolo,
Marina Ciullo,
Peter P. Pramstaller,
Mario Pirastu,
Giovanni de Gaetano,
Carlo L. Balduini
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0054289
Subject(s) - platelet , medicine , percentile , population , count data , confidence interval , young adult , physiology , demography , statistics , mathematics , poisson distribution , environmental health , sociology
Background and Objectives Although several studies demonstrated that platelet count is higher in women, decreases with age, and is influenced by genetic background, most clinical laboratories still use the reference interval 150–400×10 9 platelets/L for all subjects. The present study was to identify age- and sex-specific reference intervals for platelet count. Methods We analysed electronic records of subjects enrolled in three population-based studies that investigated inhabitants of seven Italian areas including six geographic isolates. After exclusion of patients with malignancies, liver diseases, or inherited thrombocytopenias, which could affect platelet count, reference intervals were estimated from 40,987 subjects with the non parametric method computing the 2.5° and 97.5° percentiles. Results Platelet count was similar in men and women until the age of 14, but subsequently women had steadily more platelets than men. The number of platelets decreases quickly in childhood, stabilizes in adulthood, and further decreases in oldness. The final result of this phenomenon is that platelet count in old age was reduced by 35% in men and by 25% in women compared with early infancy. Based on these findings, we estimated reference intervals for platelet count ×10 9 /L in children (176–452), adult men (141–362), adult women (156–405), old men (122–350) and, old women (140–379). Moreover, we calculated an “extended” reference interval that takes into account the differences in platelet count observed in different geographic areas. Conclusions The age-, sex-, and origin-related variability of platelet count is very wide, and the patient-adapted reference intervals we propose change the thresholds for diagnosing both thrombocytopenia and thrombocytosis in Italy.

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