| Literature DB >> 31709308 |
Athena Anderle1, Germana Bancone2,3, Gonzalo J Domingo1, Emily Gerth-Guyette1, Sampa Pal1, Ari W Satyagraha4.
Abstract
Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency, an X-linked genetic disorder, is associated with increased risk of jaundice and kernicterus at birth. G6PD deficiency can manifest later in life as severe hemolysis, when the individual is exposed to oxidative agents that range from foods such as fava beans, to diseases such as typhoid, to medications such as dapsone, to the curative drugs for Plasmodium (P.) vivax malaria, primaquine and tafenoquine. While routine testing at birth for G6PD deficiency is recommended by the World Health Organization for populations with greater than 5% prevalence of G6PD deficiency and to inform P. vivax case management using primaquine, testing coverage is extremely low. Test coverage is low due to the need to prioritize newborn interventions and the complexity of currently available G6PD tests, especially those used to inform malaria case management. More affordable, accurate, point-of-care (POC) tests for G6PD deficiency are emerging that create an opportunity to extend testing to populations that do not have access to high throughput screening services. Some of these tests are quantitative, which provides an opportunity to address the gender disparity created by the currently available POC qualitative tests that misclassify females with intermediate G6PD activity as normal. In populations where the epidemiology for G6PD deficiency and P. vivax overlap, screening for G6PD deficiency at birth to inform care of the newborn can also be used to inform malaria case management over their lifetime.Entities:
Keywords: G6PD deficiency; Plasmodium vivax; diagnostics; glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase; malaria; point-of-care
Year: 2018 PMID: 31709308 PMCID: PMC6832607 DOI: 10.3390/ijns4040034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Neonatal Screen ISSN: 2409-515X
Association between genotype and phenotype. Two methods of measuring phenotype are shown: (1) by cytochemical staining, where red blood cells (RBC) are arbitrarily assigned as having high glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) activity or low G6PD activity [5] and (2) by spectrophotometric G6PD enzyme activity measurement in whole blood. The activity is described in terms of percentage of a population’s normal value [39,40].
| Genotype | Phenotype | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| % RBC with High G6PD Activity (Cytometry) | % Normal G6PD Activity (Spectrophotometry) | ||
|
| |||
| hemizygous normal | (+) | >85% | >30% |
| hemizygous deficient | (−) | <10% | ≤30% |
|
| |||
| homozygous normal | (+1/+1) | >85% | >70% |
| heterozygous normal | (+1/+2) | ||
| heterozygous normal/deficient | (+/−) | 10–85% | ~20–80% |
| heterozygous deficient | (−1/−2) | <10% | ≤30% |
| homozygous deficient | (−1/−1) | ||
Figure 1Alignment between diagnostic platform for G6PD deficiency and tier of health care facility based on complexity of the diagnostic test and the typical resources available at each type of facility.
Characteristics of qualitative and quantitative point-of-care G6PD tests.
| Qualitative | Quantitative |
|---|---|
| Accurately classifies males | Accurately classifies males |
| Females with intermediate G6PD activity classified as normal | Accurately classifies females |
| Does not require an instrument | Requires an instrument |
| Cannot correct for operating temperature, typically resulting in a more limited operating temperature range | Corrects for temperature allowing for a broader operating temperature range |
| Time-to-result < 10 min | Time-to-result < 10 min |
| Low to moderate complexity | Moderate complexity |