Abstract:
Background: Western Kenya, being a malaria-endemic region, has a high prevalence of hemoglobinopathies mostly
sickle cell and thalassemia. The hemoglobin fractions or variants, HbA, HbA2, and HbF, serve as biomarkers for the
detection of hemoglobinopathies and are commonly used in laboratory screening and diagnosis of these diseases.
Diagnosis of diseases entails accurate and precise representation of a patient’s condition. This is the main aim of
International Organization for Standardization (ISO) certifed laboratories of ofering a reliable diagnostic guide for
the various diseases. For this to be realized, valid normal reference ranges are required. Such are reference values that
are valid for local population of the setting where they are to be used is critical in quantitative diagnostic tests. Local
normal reference ranges are necessary because research has revealed variations in the phenotypic expression of the
genes for biological characteristics in humans inhabiting diferent geographical regions, owing to epigenetic diferences imposed by physical environments, and associated sociocultural infuences, even in cases of similarity in gene
patterns. No local normal reference ranges for hemoglobin fractions are reported for Kenya and Africa as a whole.
Laboratories therefore continue to use those found in textbooks and brochures from manufacturers of diagnostic reagents, which are derived from populations of geographical locations faraway and socioculturally diferent from Kenya.
This could be misleading in diagnosis of hemoglobinopathies in western Kenya and indeed all of Kenya. Therefore, the
present study aimed at exploring the possibility of developing local normal reference ranges for the concentrations
of hemoglobin fractions, HbA, HbA2, and HbF, based on hemoglobinopathy-free, non-anemic subjects attending the
Aga Khan Hospital Kisumu in western Kenya and its satellites. The hospital serves the populations inhabiting in and
predominantly indigenous to western Kenya.
Objectives: To derive the 95% confdence intervals for hemoglobin fractions (HbA, HbA2, and HbF), evaluate the
potential of these intervals as normal reference values for the local population by use of concentrations for non-anemic hemoglobinopathy-free subjects and compare the performance of the current HPLC normal ranges with those
intervals we derived, based on receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve.
Materials and methods: This was an analytical retrospective study using routine assay results from laboratory
database for 386 non-anemic, HPLC-confrmed hemoglobinopathy-free subjects. Blood samples were obtained at the Kisumu Aga Khan Hospital and its satellite sites in western Kenya, covering January 2015 to November 9, 2021. The
data for Hb fractions were nonparametric, and so confdence intervals, together with the age of subjects, were thus
expressed as the median and interquartile range (IQR). Data for the gender and other characteristics of study subjects
were summarized in frequencies and proportions, Kruskal-Wallis H-test was used to test the signifcance of diferences
in Hb concentrations between stations and age groups, while Mann-Whitney U-test is between males and females.
The receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve was used to evaluate the potential of the derived confdence intervals as normal reference values in comparison with the commonly used normal values for hemoglobin fractions.
Results: The potential normal reference intervals were computed as 95% confdence intervals (CI) for median
percentage levels for the concentrations of the Hb fractions HbA, HbA2, and HbF for the hemoglobinopathy-free
patients. The overall confdence intervals were derived frst for the combined sample of all the hemoglobinopathyfree patients combined together irrespective station where blood specimens were obtained, age or gender, and then
followed by those for separate groups, stratifed based on station, age, and gender. The overall median values for the
hemoglobin fractions were hemoglobin: A (HbA) 87.7, IQR = 5.7, 95% CI = 76.3–99.1; hemoglobin A2 (HbA2), 3.0, IQR
= 0.6; 95% CI = 1.8–4.2; and hemoglobin F (HbF), 0.8, IQR = 0.8; 95% CI = 0.00–2.4, with the P window, 4.98, IQR = 0.4;
95% CI = 4.18–5.78. The commonly used normal reference ranges for the hemoglobin fractions were as follows: HbA
95–98%, had an accuracy of 57.5%, HbA2 of 1.5–3.5%, had an accuracy of 95.9% in grading the presumed healthy
population as hemoglobinopathy-free, while HbF 0–2.0 was equal to that established by the present study.
Conclusion: It is important to report that the use of normal range for HbA of 95–98% published by Kratz et al. [1] in
western Kenya has a potential threat of misdiagnosis of normal population and thus needs urgent review as it lacked
efcacy (p = 0.795) in grading hemoglobinopathy-free subjects as normal with a poor accuracy of 57.5%, a sensitivity
of 100%, specifcity of 0.3%, positive predictive validity of 15.1%, negative predictive validity of 1%, and 1.03 positive
likelihood ratio. However, the traditional normal range for HbA2 of 1.5–3.5% on use in western Kenya may be retained
as it was efective (p < 0.0001) in grading majority of study subjects as normal with an accuracy of 95.9%, sensitivity
of 98.4%, specifcity of 93.3%, positive predictive validity of 99.7%, negative predictive validity of 70.0%, 14.7 positive
likelihood ratio, and 0.017 negative likelihood ratio. Similarly, the existing normal range for HbF of 0–2.0 on use was
almost the same as the one we derived of 0–2.4 and therefore may be retained for use in western Kenya. It is anticipated that the fnding of this study will help improve the management of hemoglobinopathies in Kenya and Africa
at large, by contributing to improvement in the validity of the clinical-pathologic interpretation assay results for the
percentage values for the Hb fractions.