Background-During medical checkups of two unrelated female outpatients during their annual health examination and one male inpatient suVering from cardiac failure the glycated haemoglobin (HbA 1C ) concentrations measured by high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) were low, in spite of normal fasting plasma glucose concentrations. However, HbA 1C concentrations measured by latex immunoagglutination and fructosamine concentrations were within the normal range. Method-Investigations were performed to elucidate the reasons for these discrepancies.
Results-Abnormal haemoglobins, HbTakamatsu and Hb G-Szuhu, were found. The HPLC chromatogram showed an additional peak near HbA 1a+b , which resulted in falsely low HbA 1C concentrations. Isoelectric focusing analysis of the patients' haemoglobin disclosed abnormal haemoglobins, which migrated faster than normal HbA 1 in the two female patients and slower in the male patient. The cDNA sequence and amino acid analyses of the haemoglobin -chains and -chains indicated the presence of the haemoglobin variant 120 Lys→Gln in the two female patients and 80 Asn→Lys in the male patient; that is, Hb Takamatsu and Hb G-Szuhu. Conclusions-These cases show how these silent haemoglobin variants can result in falsely low HbA 1C concentration readings when using HPLC. (J Clin Pathol 2000;53:854-857)