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Vol. 44. Issue S2.
Pages S17 (October 2022)
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Vol. 44. Issue S2.
Pages S17 (October 2022)
Open Access
DIAGNOSTIC ACCURACY COMPARISON OF THE QUANTITATIVE POINT-OF-CARE ECO G6PD AND BREWERS TEST FOR ASSESSMENT OF G6PD DEFICIENCY IN INFECTIOUS DISEASES
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FRM Silva, AG Vizzoni, DPM Almeida, J Bokel, RVC Oliveira, AM Siqueira, YR Vieira, SCC Silva
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil
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Vol. 44. Issue S2
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Introduction

Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency is an X-linked, hereditary condition caused by mutations in the G6PD gene, that results in protein variants with different enzyme activity levels. G6PD provides reducing power to NADPH (reduced form of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate). NADPH effect is critical in red blood cells (RBC) due to the absence of a nucleus. Clinical manifestations are usually mild and are induced by an exogenous agent, such as drugs, infections, or dietary (fava beans). The G6PD deficiency diagnosis is crucial in infectious diseases because both infections and treatment can induce acute hemolysis. Rarely, life-threatening cases can require transfusions of RBC and hemodialysis. The gold standard for the measurement of G6PD activity is a quantitative UV spectrophotometric assay, however, it is inaccessible in most cases. Methemoglobin reduction test (Brewer's test) is a qualitative spot test most used for G6PD deficiency screening, but is imprecise, requires a cold chain, some laboratory infrastructure, trained personnel, and is time-costing. Point-of-care (POC) is a simple and fast semi-quantitative test that is becoming increasingly important when a prompt diagnosis is required and in health care of out-of-reach communities.

Objective

To compare the diagnostic accuracy of the quantitative POC ECO and Brewers test for assessment of G6PD deficiency.

Material and methods

A cross-sectional diagnostic accuracy study was enrolled between May 2020 and December 2021 at the Instituto Nacional de Infectologia Evandro Chagas, Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Individuals older than 17 years old with a suspicious diagnosis of an infectious disease were eligible. 125 convenience blood samples were tested to compare concordance analysis between Brewers test and POC STANDARD G6PD. The exclusion criteria were hemoglobin concentration < 7.0 g/dL due to technical device limitations.

Results

A total of 125 subjects (38 females and 87 males) were recruited. The median age was 42.0 years (range 18–76) in females and 45.0 years (range 19–78) in males. The median of G6PD activity was 7.1 U/g Hb (0.2-17.5). We observed a trend of concordance between the G6PD status (deficient or normal), with low frequencies of discordances in the screenings. The strength of agreement between G6PD tests was classified as almost perfect in all participants (k = 0.82, IC95% = 0.66,0.97) and in subgroups female (k = 0.83, IC95% = 0.59,1.00) and male (k = 0.81, IC95% = 0.59,1.00). The total concordance percentage (number of concordances/total) was 95% in females, 97% in males, and 96% in all participants.

Discussion

Here, we demonstrate POC ECO G6PD test could be performed during medical consultation, guiding the most appropriate therapy almost immediately. In addition to saving time and having comparable results to Brewer's test, it could be performed even in remote areas and with scarce resources, dispensing minimum laboratory requirements. Our findings will be of value to diagnose conditions that could have life-threatening consequences if not timely recognized, such as before initiating primaquine for the treatment of malaria. Therefore, it can improve healthcare in vulnerable isolated communities.

Conclusion

We observed a high concordance result between Brewers test and POC STANDARD G6PD, which is becoming the reference test to diagnose G6PD deficiency worldwide.

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Hematology, Transfusion and Cell Therapy
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