Cancers (Jan 2021)

Automated Early Detection of Myelodysplastic Syndrome within the General Population Using the Research Parameters of Beckman–Coulter DxH 800 Hematology Analyzer

  • Noémie Ravalet,
  • Amélie Foucault,
  • Frédéric Picou,
  • Martin Gombert,
  • Emmanuel Renoult,
  • Julien Lejeune,
  • Nicolas Vallet,
  • Sébastien Lachot,
  • Emmanuelle Rault,
  • Emmanuel Gyan,
  • Marie C. Bene,
  • Olivier Herault

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13030389
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. 389

Abstract

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The incidence of myelodysplastic syndrome increases with aging and the early diagnosis enables optimal care of these diseases. The DxH 800 hematology analyzer measures and calculates 126 cytological parameters, but only 23 are used for routine CBC assessment. The goal of this study was to use the 103 unexploited “research parameters” to develop an algorithm allowing for an early detection of subclinical MDS patients by triggering morphological analysis. Blood sample parameters from 101 MDS patients and 88 healthy volunteers were analyzed to identify the critical “research parameters” with: (i) the most significant differences between MDS patients and healthy volunteers, (ii) the best contributions to principal component analysis (PCA), first axis, and (iii) the best correlations with PCA, first two axes (cos2 > 0.6). Ten critical “research parameters” of white blood cells were identified, allowing for the calculation of an MDS-likelihood score (MDS-LS), based on logistic regression. Automatic calculation of the MDS-LS is easily implementable on the middleware system of the DxH 800 to generate a flag for blood smear review, and possibly early detection of MDS patients in the general population.

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