Heliyon (Dec 2022)

Multispectral imaging for MicroChip electrophoresis enables point-of-care newborn hemoglobin variant screening

  • Ran An,
  • Yuning Huang,
  • Anne Rocheleau,
  • Alireza Avanaki,
  • Priyaleela Thota,
  • Qiaochu Zhang,
  • Yuncheng Man,
  • Zoe Sekyonda,
  • Catherine I. Segbefia,
  • Yvonne Dei-Adomakoh,
  • Enoch Mensah,
  • Kwaku Ohene-Frempong,
  • Isaac Odame,
  • Amma Owusu-Ansah,
  • Umut A. Gurkan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 12
p. e11778

Abstract

Read online

Hemoglobin (Hb) disorders affect nearly 7% of the world’s population. Globally, around 400,000 babies are born annually with sickle cell disease (SCD), primarily in sub-Saharan Africa where morbidity and mortality rates are high. Screening, early diagnosis, and monitoring are not widely accessible due to technical challenges and cost. We hypothesized that multispectral imaging will allow sensitive hemoglobin variant identification in existing affordable paper-based Hb electrophoresis. To test this hypothesis, we developed the first integrated point-of-care multispectral Hb variant test: Gazelle-Multispectral. Here, we evaluated the accuracy of Gazelle-Multispectral for Hb variant newborn screening in 265 newborns with known hemoglobin variants including hemoglobin A (Hb A), hemoglobin F (Hb F), hemoglobin S (Hb S) and hemoglobin C (Hb C). Gazelle-Multispectral detected levels of Hb A, Hb F, Hb S, and Hb C/E/A2, demonstrated high correlations with the results reported by laboratory gold standard high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) at Pearson Correlation Coefficient = 0.97, 0.97, 0.93, and 0.95. Gazelle-Multispectral demonstrated accuracy of 96.8% in subjects of 0–3 days, and 96.9% in newborns. The ability to obtain accurate results on newborn samples suggest that Gazelle-Multispectral can be suitable for large-scale newborn screening and for diagnosis of SCD in low resource settings.

Keywords