| Literature DB >> 20684792 |
Melissa Kuwahata1, Rushika Wijesinghe, Mei-Fong Ho, Anita Pelecanos, Albino Bobogare, Losi Landry, Hugo Bugora, Andrew Vallely, James McCarthy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency poses a significant impediment to primaquine use for the elimination of liver stage infection with Plasmodium vivax and for gametocyte clearance, because of the risk of life-threatening haemolytic anaemia that can occur in G6PD deficient patients. Although a range of methods for screening G6PD deficiency have been described, almost all require skilled personnel, expensive laboratory equipment, freshly collected blood, and are time consuming; factors that render them unsuitable for mass-screening purposes.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20684792 PMCID: PMC2924349 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-9-223
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Figure 1Appearance of assay plate wells for testing of G6PD activity from dried blood spots. The distinct yellow colour (first well) indicates a sample with normal G6PD activity, the well with pale yellow colour (second well) represents a sample with moderate deficiency, and the remaining three almost colourless wells are indicative of severe deficiency.
The effect of storage temperature and duration on dried blood spot estimation of GPD enzyme activity
| Storage temperature | Baseline G6PD enzyme activity (%) that results in a sample testing severely deficient (< 10% activity) at the designated storage temperature and duration | Decay in enzyme activity | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | 10% | 15% | 15% | ~ 5% by Day 10 | |
| 10% | 15% | 25% | 25% | ~ 5% by Day 5 | |
| ~ 15% by Day 10 | |||||
| 10% | 15% | 25% | 50% | ~ 5% by Day 5 | |
| ~ 15% by Day 10 | |||||
| ~ 40% by Day 14 | |||||
The reliability of G6PD assays on blood spots stored for different times at different temperatures was assessed with bloodspots containing differing amount of reference G6PD enzyme activity. The table shows the % enzyme activity that tested as deficient (≤ 10% activity) at days 1, 5, 10 and 14 when stored at 4°C, 25°C and 37°C. The decay in enzyme activity represents the difference between the original enzyme activity and the activity when retested.
Figure 2Assay performance with assay mix stored for up to 4 weeks. Absorbance readings from bloodspot samples with known levels of G6PD using assay mixes stored for varying durations at ambient temperature. Each line represents assay results with a different assay mix. Uniform assay performance was observed with assay mixes stored for up to 2 weeks, but abnormal or degrading performance was observed in those stored for 3 and 4 weeks.
Comparison of G6PD test results using different assay methods
| Number | Gender | WST8 | RDT | RBWH Clinical |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | Deficient | Deficient | 0.6 |
| 2 | M | Deficient | Deficient | 0.6 |
| 3 | M | Deficient | Deficient | 0.6 |
| 4 | M | Deficient | Deficient | 0.3 |
| 5 | M | Deficient | Deficient | 0.5 |
| 7 | F | Normal | Normal | 13.8 |
| 8 | F | Normal | Normal | 12.9 |
| 9 | F | Normal | Normal | 13.6 |
| 10 | M | Normal | Normal | 13.4 |
| 11 | F | Normal | Normal | 13.6 |
| 12 | F | Normal | Normal | 14.3 |
| 13 | M | Normal | Normal | 12.9 |
| 14 | F | Normal | Normal | 12.2 |
| 15 | F | Normal | Normal | 13.4 |
| 16 | F | Normal | Normal | 12.7 |
| 17 | M | Normal | Normal | 15.6 |
| 18 | M | Normal | Normal | 15 |
| 19 | M | Normal | Normal | 10 |
| 20 | F | Normal | Normal | 13.2 |
| Control 1 | M | Normal | Normal | 15.2 |
| Control 2 | F | Normal | Normal | 12.8 |
Pathology testing 9-20 U/gHb is classified as Normal.
G6PD deficiency prevalence in Isabel Province and prevalence by gender (n(%))
| Total (%) | Male (%) | Female (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8,541 | 3,880 (45.6) | 4,636 (54.4) | |
| 6,810 (79.7) | 3,037 (89.9) | 3,750 (80.9) | |
| 1,731(20.3) | 843 (21.7) | 886 (19.1) | |
| 590 (6.9) | 421 (10.9) | 168 (3.6) | |
| 1,141 (13.4) | 422 (10.9) | 717 (15.5) |
† < 30% normal enzyme activity
†† < 10% normal enzyme activity
††† 10-30% normal enzyme activity
Figure 3Distribution of G6PD activity in Isabel Island by gender. OD measures were converted to % activity relative to normal control and were graphed to visualise any difference in distribution pattern of G6PD activity between males and females.
Figure 4Map of G6PD deficiency prevalence in Isabel Province. G6PD deficiency prevalence in villages was mapped to compare prevalence among villages. High severe deficiency (> 10%) were observed in Susubona, Jejevo, Hovikoilo, Kolosori West, Sigana, Popoheo and Thithiro.
Spatial autocorrelation (Moran's I statistics) of village-wise severe G6PD deficiency
| Females | Males | Combined | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.18 | 0.32 | 0.19 | |
| 0.32 | 0.55 | 0.35 | |
| > 0.10 | > 0.10 | > 0.10 |
Figure 5G6PD deficiency in Females in Isabel Province. Spatial cluster analysis with SaTScan revealed clustering of villages with higher G6PD severe deficiency prevalence among Females (p = 0.001). Map shows prevalence distribution in Isabel province.