HbA2 levels in children with β-thalassemia trait associated with iron deficiency: A perspective for pediatricians.

Am J Clin Pathol

Section of Hematology, Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, Gazi University, Ankara, Turkey.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Hemoglobin A2 (HbA2) levels of 3.5% or higher are crucial for screening β-thalassemia trait, but iron deficiency can lower these levels, complicating diagnosis, especially in children.
  • A study examined 213 children with β-thalassemia trait to compare HbA2 levels in those with iron deficiency versus those who were iron-sufficient, finding that iron-deficient children still showed significant HbA2 levels to be diagnosed.
  • The results indicate that low HbA2 levels may relate more to thalassemia mutations than iron deficiency, suggesting that screening for β-thalassemia should proceed regardless of iron status.

Article Abstract

Objectives: A critical factor in β-thalassemia trait screening is a hemoglobin A2 (HbA2) level of 3.5% or higher. In children with iron deficiency, HbA2 levels decrease, and diagnosis may be missed. Studies with adult carriers have yielded conflicting results on this issue. The effectiveness of HbA2-based thalassemia screening in carrier children with iron deficiency has not been studied before.

Methods: In this study, among 213 children with β-thalassemia trait, those with iron deficiency were determined based on ferritin value (<15 ng/mL), and their HbA2 levels were examined. We compared HbA2 levels of iron-deficient and iron-sufficient carriers and examined the correlation between low HbA2 levels and ferritin level. Because ferritin is an acute-phase reactant, similar evaluations were made by using transferrin saturation as the criterion for iron deficiency.

Results: The median HbA2 value of iron-deficient carrier children was 4.1% and within the diagnostic range (≥3.5%) in the majority of children. Median HbA2 levels in iron-deficient carriers differed from levels in iron-sufficient carriers (4.1% vs 4.9%, P < .007). No correlation was present between low HbA2 levels and ferritin levels (0.226). Furthermore, among children without iron deficiency, there were individuals with low HbA2 levels (26.9%). Similar results were obtained when transferrin saturation was used.

Conclusions: Hemoglobin A2 can be used as a screening test in children with β-thalassemia trait, despite accompanying iron deficiency. Low HbA2 levels in these children may be the result of underlying thalassemia mutation, not the result of accompanying iron deficiency. Therefore, in suspected cases of β-thalassemia trait, evaluation should continue, regardless of iron status or treatment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11637608PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ajcp/aqae085DOI Listing

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