BACKGROUND The α-thalassemia is a highly prevalent disease in tropical and subtropical regions, including southern China, and is mainly caused by deletion in α-globin genes (HBA1 and HBA2). The clinical… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND The α-thalassemia is a highly prevalent disease in tropical and subtropical regions, including southern China, and is mainly caused by deletion in α-globin genes (HBA1 and HBA2). The clinical manifestation of α-thalassemia is highly correlated with the copy number of α-globin genes. The decrease in copy number results in α-thalassemia, while duplication or triplication compounded with β-thalassemia may aggravate the clinical manifestation. However, the common methods used to measure the copy number variants can only detect the three common types: -SEA, -α3.7, and -α4.2, and may easily miss the rare deletional type and duplication or triplication cases. Therefore, a new method that allows the detection of different copy number variants in α-globin genes simultaneously and accurately needs to be established. METHODS A total of 428 peripheral-blood and fetal chorionic villus or amniotic fluid samples were used in this study. We employed a pair of primers and two probes, one for HBA1 and another for HBA2, to perform droplet digital polymerase chain reaction (ddPCR). Each reaction needed the ddPCR of RPP30 as a reference gene to calculate the copy number. RESULTS We accurately detected the copy number variants in α-globin genes, including the common form α-thalassemia, triplications such as αααanti4.2, and trisomy 16, by performing only two reactions. The accuracy rate for detecting the copy number of α-globin genes was up to 100%. CONCLUSION In conclusion, ddPCR served as an accurate and rapid method for detecting copy number variations in the clinical screening for α-thalassemia.
               
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