2015
DOI: 10.3109/03630269.2015.1036165
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Thalassemia Phenotypes and Genotypes in Taiwan: A Retrospective Study Based on Thalassemia Screening of Young Men for Military Conscription

Abstract: Prenatal thalassemia studies from Taiwan show that one-third of fetuses with genetic abnormalities have β-thalassemia major (β-TM). However, the phenotypes and genotypes of adult thalassemia warrant further investigation. From September 2006 to April 2014, 741 male candidates drafted for military service with mean corpuscular volume (MCV) <80 fL and serum ferritin >20 µg/L were analyzed. The results showed that the detection rates of α- and β-thalassemia (α- an β-thal) were 50.20% (372/741) and 49.12% (364/741… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Thalassemia is more prevalent in Mediterranean areas and parts of East Asia, including Taiwan, probably related to ethnicities/races 35,36 . The prevalence of alpha and beta‐thalassemia carrier in Taiwan was at least 3% to 4% and 1% to 2%, respectively 37‐39 . In our cohort, one patient had medical record of alpha‐thalassemia, which was likely to be a silent carrier or minor, and one had beta‐thalassemia minor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
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“…Thalassemia is more prevalent in Mediterranean areas and parts of East Asia, including Taiwan, probably related to ethnicities/races 35,36 . The prevalence of alpha and beta‐thalassemia carrier in Taiwan was at least 3% to 4% and 1% to 2%, respectively 37‐39 . In our cohort, one patient had medical record of alpha‐thalassemia, which was likely to be a silent carrier or minor, and one had beta‐thalassemia minor.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 73%
“…35,36 The prevalence of alpha and betathalassemia carrier in Taiwan was at least 3% to 4% and 1% to 2%, respectively. [37][38][39] In our cohort, one patient had medical record of alpha-thalassemia, which was likely to be a silent carrier or minor, and one had beta-thalassemia minor. Regarding INR, previous studies that focused on the INR range in anticoagulant therapy implied that ethnic/racial background is likely to be a determinant.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…62 participants with microcytic hypochromic erythrocytes and one participant with normocytic hypochromic erythrocytes had a large deletion involving the α-globin gene region: 58 individuals had an ∼20-kb deletion, 4 had an ∼30-kb deletion, and 1 had an ∼33-kb deletion ( Fig 5C–F ). Because the α 0 thalassemia -- SEA 20-kb deletion in the α-globin gene is the most common cause of α-thalassemia in the Taiwanese population ( Chen et al, 2002 ; Chao et al, 2014 ; Lee et al, 2015 ; Wang et al, 2017 ), we conducted tests to detect the presence of this deletion in 1,474 participants who had WGS data and genomic DNA available for analysis ( Fig 5G ). By performing PCR, we detected the α 0 thalassemia -- SEA 20-kb deletion in the α-globin gene in 60 participants, including 58 participants screened using BreakDancer (57 participants had an MCV of <80 fl and an MCH of <25 pg/RBC and one had an MCV of >80 fl and an MCH of <25 pg/RBC) and two participants who lacked BreakDancer data (one participant had an MCV of >80 fl and an MCH of <25 pg/RBC and another participant had an MCV of <80 fl and an MCH of >25 pg/RBC; Fig 5L ).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, more than 100 genetic forms of α-thalassemia have been identified in which α 0 -thalassemia is usually the most common clinically relevant form (Giardine et al, 2014). In Taiwan, the -SEA type of the α 0 -thalassemia mutation is the most common deletion mutation, accounting for 69-91% cases; this finding indicates that the prevalence of this mutation is ~4.0-4.5% in Taiwanese individuals (Chen et al, 2002;Lee et al, 2015;Wang et al, 2017). All the three SNPs are specific to the Asian population and highly linked to the microcytic hypochromic trait, with a minor allele frequency of ~1.77-1.94%.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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