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1.
Singapore medical journal ; : 287-296, 2020.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-827315

ABSTRACT

Preoperative anaemia is common in the Asia-Pacific. Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA) is a risk factor that can be addressed under patient blood management (PBM) Pillar 1, leading to reduced morbidity and mortality. We examined PBM implementation under four different healthcare systems, identified challenges and proposed several measures: (a) Test for anaemia once patients are scheduled for surgery. (b) Inform patients about risks of preoperative anaemia and benefits of treatment. (c) Treat IDA and replenish iron stores before surgery, using intravenous iron when oral treatment is ineffective, not tolerated or when rapid iron replenishment is needed; transfusion should not be the default management. (d) Harness support from multiple medical disciplines and relevant bodies to promote PBM implementation. (e) Demonstrate better outcomes and cost savings from reduced mortality and morbidity. Although PBM implementation may seem complex and daunting, it is feasible to start small. Implementing PBM Pillar 1, particularly in preoperative patients, is a sensible first step regardless of the healthcare setting.

2.
Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore ; : 5-15, 2019.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-777408

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION@#Haemoglobinopathy testing is performed for carrier screening and evaluation of microcytic anaemia. We evaluated the effectiveness of thalassaemia screening tests at our institution and suggest ways of improving the testing algorithm.@*MATERIALS AND METHODS@#A total of 10,084 non-antenatal and 11,364 antenatal samples with alkaline gel electrophoresis (AGE), capillary electrophoresis (CE), haemoglobin H (HbH) inclusion test, mean corpuscular haemoglobin (MCH) and mean corpuscular volume (MCV) were retrospectively reviewed. A subgroup of 187 samples with genetic testing was correlated with HbH inclusions and MCH/ MCV. The effect of iron deficiency on percentage hemoglobin A2 (HbA2) was studied.@*RESULTS@#HbH inclusion test showed low sensitivity of 21.43% for α-thalassaemia mutations but higher sensitivity of 78.95% for deletion. By receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis, MCH ≤28 pg or MCV ≤80 fl for non-antenatal samples and MCH ≤27 pg or MCV ≤81 fl for antenatal samples had >98% sensitivity for HbH inclusions. Above these thresholds, the probability that HbH inclusions would be absent was 99%). MCH ≥28 pg had 100% sensitivity (95% CI 95.63%-100%) for α-thalassaemia mutations and 97.68% calculated NPV in the antenatal population. Detection of haemoglobin variants by CE correlated highly with AGE (99.89% sensitivity, 100% specificity). Severe iron deficiency reduced HbA2 in hemoglobin ( <0.001) and α-thalassaemia ( = 0.0035), but not in β-thalassaemia.@*CONCLUSION@#MCH/MCV thresholds have adequate sensitivity for α-thalassaemia in the antenatal population, and genotyping plays an important role as HbH inclusion test shows low sensitivity. CE without AGE, may be used as initial screening for haemoglobin variants. Our study provides contemporary data to guide thalassaemia screening algorithms in Singapore.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Male , Pregnancy , Blood Protein Electrophoresis , Electrophoresis, Capillary , Erythrocyte Inclusions , Pathology , Erythrocyte Indices , Genetic Testing , Hemoglobin H , Mass Screening , Pregnancy Complications, Hematologic , Blood , Diagnosis , Retrospective Studies , Sensitivity and Specificity , Singapore , alpha-Thalassemia , Blood , Diagnosis
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