The increase of HbA(2) is the most important feature in the identification of beta-thalassemia carriers. However, some carriers are difficult to identify, because the level of HbA(2) is not in the typical range. Few data are available concerning the prevalence of such unusual phenotypes, and knowing their expected prevalence could be helpful in detecting systematic drifts in the analytical systems for HbA(2) quantification. In this study we report a retrospective investigation in two centres with high prevalence of beta-thalassemia. The prevalence of borderline subjects was found to be 2.2 and 3.0%, respectively. The genotypes of a subgroup of these subjects were then analyzed and in about 25% of cases a mutation in the globin genes was identified. We conclude that the occurrence of HbA(2) borderline phenotypes is not a rare event. In order to obtain more accurate HbA(2) measurements the development of an international reference measurement system for HbA(2), based on quantitative peptide mapping, has been recently started. We believe that the innovative approach of our method could also be used as a model to develop accurate quantitative methods for other red cell proteins relevant to the biodynamic properties and the surface electrochemistry of erythrocytes.

New analytical tools and epidemiological data for the identification of HbA2 borderline subjects in the screening for beta-thalassemia / A. Mosca, R. Paleari, R. Galanello, C. Sollaino, L. Perseu, F.R. Demartis, C. Passarello, A. Giambona, A. Maggio, IFCC Working Group on Standardization of HbA2. - In: BIOELECTROCHEMISTRY. - ISSN 1567-5394. - 73:2(2008 Aug), pp. 137-140.

New analytical tools and epidemiological data for the identification of HbA2 borderline subjects in the screening for beta-thalassemia

A. Mosca
Primo
;
R. Paleari
Secondo
;
2008

Abstract

The increase of HbA(2) is the most important feature in the identification of beta-thalassemia carriers. However, some carriers are difficult to identify, because the level of HbA(2) is not in the typical range. Few data are available concerning the prevalence of such unusual phenotypes, and knowing their expected prevalence could be helpful in detecting systematic drifts in the analytical systems for HbA(2) quantification. In this study we report a retrospective investigation in two centres with high prevalence of beta-thalassemia. The prevalence of borderline subjects was found to be 2.2 and 3.0%, respectively. The genotypes of a subgroup of these subjects were then analyzed and in about 25% of cases a mutation in the globin genes was identified. We conclude that the occurrence of HbA(2) borderline phenotypes is not a rare event. In order to obtain more accurate HbA(2) measurements the development of an international reference measurement system for HbA(2), based on quantitative peptide mapping, has been recently started. We believe that the innovative approach of our method could also be used as a model to develop accurate quantitative methods for other red cell proteins relevant to the biodynamic properties and the surface electrochemistry of erythrocytes.
English
Beta-thalassemia; HbA2; HPLC; Mass spectrometry; Reference systems
Settore BIO/12 - Biochimica Clinica e Biologia Molecolare Clinica
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
ago-2008
Elsevier
73
2
137
140
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
New analytical tools and epidemiological data for the identification of HbA2 borderline subjects in the screening for beta-thalassemia / A. Mosca, R. Paleari, R. Galanello, C. Sollaino, L. Perseu, F.R. Demartis, C. Passarello, A. Giambona, A. Maggio, IFCC Working Group on Standardization of HbA2. - In: BIOELECTROCHEMISTRY. - ISSN 1567-5394. - 73:2(2008 Aug), pp. 137-140.
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
10
262
Article (author)
si
A. Mosca, R. Paleari, R. Galanello, C. Sollaino, L. Perseu, F.R. Demartis, C. Passarello, A. Giambona, A. Maggio, IFCC Working Group on Standardizatio...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/53748
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