Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy

Prenatal diagnosis of severe thalassaemia is conventionally diagnosed by fetal DNA analysis but it can not be widely used due to its drawbacks of high cost and technical effort. This prospective study describes a new prenatal strategy in preventing severe thalassaemia by a more simple and inexpensiv...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tongsong T., Wanapirak C., Sirivatanapa P., Sanguansermsri T., Sirichotiyakul S., Piyamongkol W., Chanprapaph P.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3502482
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3329
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Chiang Mai University
Language: English
id th-cmuir.6653943832-3329
record_format dspace
spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-33292014-08-30T02:26:01Z Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy Tongsong T. Wanapirak C. Sirivatanapa P. Sanguansermsri T. Sirichotiyakul S. Piyamongkol W. Chanprapaph P. Prenatal diagnosis of severe thalassaemia is conventionally diagnosed by fetal DNA analysis but it can not be widely used due to its drawbacks of high cost and technical effort. This prospective study describes a new prenatal strategy in preventing severe thalassaemia by a more simple and inexpensive way. The strategy included: (1) genetic counselling; (2) identification of pregnancies at risk by retrospective screening (history of known risk) and prospective screening for asymptomatic women; (3) cordocentesis at 16-22 weeks' gestation; (4) fetal blood analysis with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC); (5) termination of affected pregnancy. The prospective screening consisted of 2 min osmotic fragility (OF) and HbE screening test in women with no risk, and testing the husbands of the women with a positive result. If both of the couple had a positive result, the diagnostic test (HbA(2) level and PCR alpha-thal 1) for the carrier was needed. A pregnancy in which both of the couple were carriers was considered at risk. This strategy identified 181 and 108 couples at risk by prospective (from 7954 pregnancies) and retrospective screening, respectively. Two hundred and forty-two underwent cordocentesis, 108 from retrospective screening and 134 from prospective screening, and 62 were proven to have severe thalassaemia (29 and 33 in retrospective and prospective screening, respectively). The strategy identified nearly all, if not all, fetuses with severe thalassaemia without false positives among the screened couples. In conclusion, the strategy proves to be highly effective in the control of severe thalassaemia. 2014-08-30T02:26:01Z 2014-08-30T02:26:01Z 2000 Journal Article 0197-3851 10719327 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3502482 http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3329 eng
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
language English
description Prenatal diagnosis of severe thalassaemia is conventionally diagnosed by fetal DNA analysis but it can not be widely used due to its drawbacks of high cost and technical effort. This prospective study describes a new prenatal strategy in preventing severe thalassaemia by a more simple and inexpensive way. The strategy included: (1) genetic counselling; (2) identification of pregnancies at risk by retrospective screening (history of known risk) and prospective screening for asymptomatic women; (3) cordocentesis at 16-22 weeks' gestation; (4) fetal blood analysis with high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC); (5) termination of affected pregnancy. The prospective screening consisted of 2 min osmotic fragility (OF) and HbE screening test in women with no risk, and testing the husbands of the women with a positive result. If both of the couple had a positive result, the diagnostic test (HbA(2) level and PCR alpha-thal 1) for the carrier was needed. A pregnancy in which both of the couple were carriers was considered at risk. This strategy identified 181 and 108 couples at risk by prospective (from 7954 pregnancies) and retrospective screening, respectively. Two hundred and forty-two underwent cordocentesis, 108 from retrospective screening and 134 from prospective screening, and 62 were proven to have severe thalassaemia (29 and 33 in retrospective and prospective screening, respectively). The strategy identified nearly all, if not all, fetuses with severe thalassaemia without false positives among the screened couples. In conclusion, the strategy proves to be highly effective in the control of severe thalassaemia.
format Article
author Tongsong T.
Wanapirak C.
Sirivatanapa P.
Sanguansermsri T.
Sirichotiyakul S.
Piyamongkol W.
Chanprapaph P.
spellingShingle Tongsong T.
Wanapirak C.
Sirivatanapa P.
Sanguansermsri T.
Sirichotiyakul S.
Piyamongkol W.
Chanprapaph P.
Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy
author_facet Tongsong T.
Wanapirak C.
Sirivatanapa P.
Sanguansermsri T.
Sirichotiyakul S.
Piyamongkol W.
Chanprapaph P.
author_sort Tongsong T.
title Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy
title_short Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy
title_full Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy
title_fullStr Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy
title_full_unstemmed Prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: Chiang Mai strategy
title_sort prenatal control of severe thalassaemia: chiang mai strategy
publishDate 2014
url http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/3502482
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/handle/6653943832/3329
_version_ 1681420027742388224