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Adjustment of total plasma calcium for albumin concentrations avoids overdiagnosis of hypocalcemia in geriatric patients

  • 28.01.2026
  • Original Contributions

Abstract

Background

Calcium is critically involved in bone metabolism and stability, nerve excitability and intercellular signal transduction.

Methods

In this retrospective study, calcium plasma concentrations of all patients treated in 2018 at our institution were evaluated. As approximately 50% of the plasma calcium is bound to plasma proteins, in particular albumin, additionally the respective plasma albumin concentration was determined and the albumin-corrected calcium plasma concentration was estimated.

Results

In 1246 of 1721 cases the plasma calcium concentration on admission was normal (2.15–2.55 mmol/l), in 421 cases hypocalcemia (< 2.15 mmol/l) and in 38 cases hypercalcemia (> 2.55 mmol/l) were detected. In 1226 of 1543 cases (79.5%) hypoalbuminemia was noted. After correction of the plasma calcium levels for plasma albumin by the modified Payne equation, the corrected plasma calcium was normal in 1272 cases (73.9%), decreased in 15 cases (0.9%), and elevated in 256 cases (14.9%). The frequency of hypercalcemia > 2.8 mmol/l requiring rapid clinical interventions without correction for plasma albumin was 6 of 1705 patients (0.4%), after correction for albumin 24 of 1543 patients (1.6%). In logistic regression analysis, higher albumin was strongly associated with a decreased mortality (odds ratio, OR = 0.88, 95% confidence interval, CI 0.83–0.94, p < 0.001), whereas the plasma calcium concentration had no independent influence on mortality.

Conclusion

Without correction for plasma albumin, approximately 25% of the patients were hypocalcemic on admission. After correction for plasma albumin, this rate fell to < 1%. We suggest that the determination of plasma albumin should be included in the clinical routine on admission in all geriatric patients.
Titel
Adjustment of total plasma calcium for albumin concentrations avoids overdiagnosis of hypocalcemia in geriatric patients
Verfasst von
Evelyn John
Heide Siggelkow
Johannes Wieditz
Olga Kunz
Marija Djukic
Roland Nau, MD MSc
Publikationsdatum
28.01.2026
Verlag
Springer Medizin
Erschienen in
Zeitschrift für Gerontologie und Geriatrie
Print ISSN: 0948-6704
Elektronische ISSN: 1435-1269
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00391-026-02551-8
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