Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia

Genetic disorders of haemoglobin, particularly the sickle cell diseases and the alpha and beta thalassaemias, are the commonest inherited disorders worldwide. The majority of affected births occur in low-income and lower-middle income countries. Screening programmes are a vital tool to counter these...

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Main Authors: Penman, B, Gupta, S, Weatherall, D
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2014
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author Penman, B
Gupta, S
Weatherall, D
author_facet Penman, B
Gupta, S
Weatherall, D
author_sort Penman, B
collection OXFORD
description Genetic disorders of haemoglobin, particularly the sickle cell diseases and the alpha and beta thalassaemias, are the commonest inherited disorders worldwide. The majority of affected births occur in low-income and lower-middle income countries. Screening programmes are a vital tool to counter these haemoglobinopathies by: (i) identifying individual carriers and allowing them to make informed reproductive choices, and (ii) generating population level gene-frequency estimates, to help ensure the optimal allocation of public health resources. For both of these functions it is vital that the screen performed is suitably sensitive. One popular first-stage screening option to detect carriers of beta thalassaemia in low-income countries is the One Tube Osmotic Fragility Test (OTOFT). Here we introduce a population genetic framework within which to quantify the likely sensitivity and specificity of the OTOFT in different epidemiological contexts. We demonstrate that interactions between the carrier states for beta thalassaemia and alpha thalassaemia, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and Southeast Asian Ovalocytosis have the potential to reduce the sensitivity of OTOFTs for beta thalassaemia heterozygosity to below 70%. Our results therefore caution against the widespread application of OTOFTs in regions where these erythrocyte variants co-occur.
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spelling oxford-uuid:8b2d8ab1-a01a-4698-bf02-b2c7b483e5ca2022-03-26T22:36:32ZEpistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemiaJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:8b2d8ab1-a01a-4698-bf02-b2c7b483e5caEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordWiley2014Penman, BGupta, SWeatherall, DGenetic disorders of haemoglobin, particularly the sickle cell diseases and the alpha and beta thalassaemias, are the commonest inherited disorders worldwide. The majority of affected births occur in low-income and lower-middle income countries. Screening programmes are a vital tool to counter these haemoglobinopathies by: (i) identifying individual carriers and allowing them to make informed reproductive choices, and (ii) generating population level gene-frequency estimates, to help ensure the optimal allocation of public health resources. For both of these functions it is vital that the screen performed is suitably sensitive. One popular first-stage screening option to detect carriers of beta thalassaemia in low-income countries is the One Tube Osmotic Fragility Test (OTOFT). Here we introduce a population genetic framework within which to quantify the likely sensitivity and specificity of the OTOFT in different epidemiological contexts. We demonstrate that interactions between the carrier states for beta thalassaemia and alpha thalassaemia, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency and Southeast Asian Ovalocytosis have the potential to reduce the sensitivity of OTOFTs for beta thalassaemia heterozygosity to below 70%. Our results therefore caution against the widespread application of OTOFTs in regions where these erythrocyte variants co-occur.
spellingShingle Penman, B
Gupta, S
Weatherall, D
Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
title Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
title_full Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
title_fullStr Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
title_full_unstemmed Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
title_short Epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
title_sort epistasis and the sensitivity of phenotypic screens for beta thalassaemia
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