PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Impact of prematurity and immigration on neonatal screening for sickle cell disease.

  • Ernesto Cortés-Castell,
  • Antonio Palazón-Bru,
  • Carolina Pla,
  • Mercedes Goicoechea,
  • María Mercedes Rizo-Baeza,
  • Mercedes Juste,
  • Vicente Francisco Gil-Guillén

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171604
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. e0171604

Abstract

Read online

BACKGROUND:Others have described a relationship between hemoglobin A levels and gestational age, gender and ethnicity. However, studies are needed to determine normal cut-off points considering these factors. To address this issue we designed a study to determine the percentiles of normality of neonatal hemoglobin A levels taking these factors into account. METHODS:This cross-sectional study involved 16,025 samples for sickle cell disease screening in the province of Alicante, Spain, which has a high immigration rate. The primary variable was hemoglobin A, and the secondary variables were gender, gestational age (preterm and full term) and maternal origin (Spain, the rest of Europe, North Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Asia). Percentiles of normality (1 and 99) were obtained by origin, gender and gestational age using quantile regression models and bootstrap samples. The association between these percentiles of normality and altered levels (≥1%) of hemoglobin E was analyzed. We obtained the percentiles of normality (1 and 99) for each maternal origin, gender and gestational age. RESULTS:Of a total of 88 possible E carriers, 65 had above-normal hemoglobin A levels (74%). The levels of normality for hemoglobin A varied greatly according to the maternal origin and gestational age. CONCLUSION:With the levels of normality that we established it is possible to discard samples with unrecorded blood transfusions. Our methodology could be applied to other diseases in the neonatal screening.