RESUMEN
The early eluting peaks in the first minute of cation-exchange high-performance liquid chromatography (CE-HPLC) are often not analysed in haemoglobin pattern studies, except for haemoglobin (Hb) Bart's and Hb H peaks. In this study, we described the presence of a specific α-thalassaemia early eluting peak (αEEP) at the retention time of 0.24 min generated by Variant II CE-HPLC (ß-Thalassaemia Short Program; Bio-Rad Laboratories). We have evaluated the utility of αEEP for the screening of α-thalassaemia trait in our local Chinese population in comparison to the Hb H inclusion body test. A total of 303 blood samples presenting with microcytosis were sent for haemoglobin pattern study and were analysed for the presence or absence of αEEP and Hb H inclusions. Twenty cases with a normal mean corpuscular volume were assessed as a control. Discordant results between the αEEP and the Hb H inclusion test were reviewed with the α-globin genotyping test performed. The concordance rate of the αEEP and the Hb H inclusion body test was 96.0% (κ=0.921, p<0.001). Eight of 303 cases (2.6%) were initially negative for the Hb H inclusion test but positive for the αEEP. All eight cases were found to have occasional Hb H inclusion bodies upon review. Four of 303 cases (1.3%) were negative for the αEEP but positive for the Hb H inclusion test. Of these four cases, two (50%) showed heterozygous Southeast Asian (SEA) type deletion, one (25%) showed Hb Quong Sze mutation, and one (25%) showed no mutation detected upon molecular testing. All the Hb E trait cases with no Hb H inclusions and the negative control group showed the absence of the αEEP. The sensitivity and specificity of αEEP for detecting SEA deletion were 93.8% and 100% respectively, which is superior to the Hb H inclusion test (sensitivity 81.3%, specificity 95.2%). The αEEP is found to be a more sensitive method than the Hb H inclusion body test in the screening of α-thalassaemia trait in our Chinese population, in which SEA type deletion is prevalent. Further study is needed to explore the utility of the αEEP in the screening of α-thalassaemia traits in other populations. The exact nature of the αEEP is yet to be defined.