Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children

Abstract When screening for α‐thalassemia in children, adult cut‐offs for mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) are generally applied to guide genetic evaluation. However, the normal ranges for MCV and MCH are lower in children than in adults, so we hypothesized that us...

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Main Authors: Peter H. Nissen, Helene Narvestad‐Bøttger, Helle Pilgaard Kristensen, Anne Winther‐Larsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023-02-01
Series:eJHaem
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/jha2.627
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author Peter H. Nissen
Helene Narvestad‐Bøttger
Helle Pilgaard Kristensen
Anne Winther‐Larsen
author_facet Peter H. Nissen
Helene Narvestad‐Bøttger
Helle Pilgaard Kristensen
Anne Winther‐Larsen
author_sort Peter H. Nissen
collection DOAJ
description Abstract When screening for α‐thalassemia in children, adult cut‐offs for mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) are generally applied to guide genetic evaluation. However, the normal ranges for MCV and MCH are lower in children than in adults, so we hypothesized that using age‐matched cut‐offs could lead to a more rational diagnostic strategy. The aim of this study was to evaluate if age‐matched cut‐offs could be applied advantageously. Data on children referred to a hemoglobin fractionation at the Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Aarhus University Hospital between 2016–2021 were identified in the laboratory information system. α‐globin gene (HBA1/HBA2) genotyping was performed using multiplex gap‐polymerase chain reaction. A total of 387 children were identified. HBA1/HBA2‐genotyping was performed in 207 children (53%), and α‐thalassemia was diagnosed in 47 children (23%) with −α3.7/αα being the predominant genotype (13%). We found that 23 children had MCV and MCH levels in the normal age‐matched range, and two of these children (9%) were α+ thalassemia carriers with three functional α‐globin genes. Using age‐specific cut‐off levels resulted in a reduction of 23 (11%) genotypes performed. In conclusion, applying age‐matched cut‐offs for MCV and MCH when screening children for α‐thalassemia lead to 11% fewer genotypes performed while 9% carriers of α+ thalassemia (of the medically innocuous genotype −α3.7/αα) would have been overlooked.
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spelling doaj.art-bf69938d5a6a443c8162db36f85420e02024-03-13T13:30:47ZengWileyeJHaem2688-61462023-02-0141182510.1002/jha2.627Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in childrenPeter H. Nissen0Helene Narvestad‐Bøttger1Helle Pilgaard Kristensen2Anne Winther‐Larsen3Department of Clinical Biochemistry Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus DenmarkDepartment of Clinical Biochemistry Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus DenmarkDepartment of Clinical Biochemistry Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus DenmarkDepartment of Clinical Biochemistry Aarhus University Hospital Aarhus DenmarkAbstract When screening for α‐thalassemia in children, adult cut‐offs for mean corpuscular volume (MCV) and mean corpuscular hemoglobin (MCH) are generally applied to guide genetic evaluation. However, the normal ranges for MCV and MCH are lower in children than in adults, so we hypothesized that using age‐matched cut‐offs could lead to a more rational diagnostic strategy. The aim of this study was to evaluate if age‐matched cut‐offs could be applied advantageously. Data on children referred to a hemoglobin fractionation at the Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Aarhus University Hospital between 2016–2021 were identified in the laboratory information system. α‐globin gene (HBA1/HBA2) genotyping was performed using multiplex gap‐polymerase chain reaction. A total of 387 children were identified. HBA1/HBA2‐genotyping was performed in 207 children (53%), and α‐thalassemia was diagnosed in 47 children (23%) with −α3.7/αα being the predominant genotype (13%). We found that 23 children had MCV and MCH levels in the normal age‐matched range, and two of these children (9%) were α+ thalassemia carriers with three functional α‐globin genes. Using age‐specific cut‐off levels resulted in a reduction of 23 (11%) genotypes performed. In conclusion, applying age‐matched cut‐offs for MCV and MCH when screening children for α‐thalassemia lead to 11% fewer genotypes performed while 9% carriers of α+ thalassemia (of the medically innocuous genotype −α3.7/αα) would have been overlooked.https://doi.org/10.1002/jha2.627alpha‐thalassemiagenetic evaluationhemoglobin A2mean corpuscular hemoglobinmean corpuscular volumescreening
spellingShingle Peter H. Nissen
Helene Narvestad‐Bøttger
Helle Pilgaard Kristensen
Anne Winther‐Larsen
Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children
eJHaem
alpha‐thalassemia
genetic evaluation
hemoglobin A2
mean corpuscular hemoglobin
mean corpuscular volume
screening
title Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children
title_full Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children
title_fullStr Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children
title_full_unstemmed Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children
title_short Impact of age‐dependent red blood cell parameters on α‐globin gene genotyping in children
title_sort impact of age dependent red blood cell parameters on α globin gene genotyping in children
topic alpha‐thalassemia
genetic evaluation
hemoglobin A2
mean corpuscular hemoglobin
mean corpuscular volume
screening
url https://doi.org/10.1002/jha2.627
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