Purpose Current American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for children with Down syndrome (DS) recommend a complete blood count (CBC) at birth and hemoglobin annually to screen for iron deficiency (ID) and ID anemia (IDA) in low-risk children. We aimed to determine if macrocytosis masks the diagnosis of ID/IDA and to evaluate the utility of biochemical and red blood cell indices for detecting ID/IDA in DS. Methods We reviewed data from 856 individuals from five DS specialty clinics. Data included hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, red cell distribution width (RDW), percent transferrin saturation (TS), ferritin, and c-reactive protein. Receiver operating characteristic curves were calculated. Results Macrocytosis was found in 32% of the sample. If hemoglobin alone was used for screening, all individuals with IDA would have been identified, but ID would have been missed in all subjects. RDW had the highest discriminability of any single test for ID/IDA. The combination of RDW with ferritin or TS led to 100% sensitivity, and RDW combined with ferritin showed the highest discriminability for ID/IDA. Conclusion We provide evidence to support that a CBC and ferritin be obtained routinely for children over 1 year old with DS rather than hemoglobin alone for detection of ID.

Hart, S.j., Zimmerman, K., Linardic, C.m., Cannon, S., Pastore, A., Patsiogiannis, V., et al. (2020). Detection of iron deficiency in children with Down syndrome. GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 22(2), 317-325 [10.1038/s41436-019-0637-4].

Detection of iron deficiency in children with Down syndrome

Rossi P.;
2020-01-01

Abstract

Purpose Current American Academy of Pediatrics guidelines for children with Down syndrome (DS) recommend a complete blood count (CBC) at birth and hemoglobin annually to screen for iron deficiency (ID) and ID anemia (IDA) in low-risk children. We aimed to determine if macrocytosis masks the diagnosis of ID/IDA and to evaluate the utility of biochemical and red blood cell indices for detecting ID/IDA in DS. Methods We reviewed data from 856 individuals from five DS specialty clinics. Data included hemoglobin, mean corpuscular volume, red cell distribution width (RDW), percent transferrin saturation (TS), ferritin, and c-reactive protein. Receiver operating characteristic curves were calculated. Results Macrocytosis was found in 32% of the sample. If hemoglobin alone was used for screening, all individuals with IDA would have been identified, but ID would have been missed in all subjects. RDW had the highest discriminability of any single test for ID/IDA. The combination of RDW with ferritin or TS led to 100% sensitivity, and RDW combined with ferritin showed the highest discriminability for ID/IDA. Conclusion We provide evidence to support that a CBC and ferritin be obtained routinely for children over 1 year old with DS rather than hemoglobin alone for detection of ID.
2020
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore MED/38 - PEDIATRIA GENERALE E SPECIALISTICA
English
Down syndrome
iron deficiency
iron deficiency anemia
trisomy 21
macrocytosis
Hart, S.j., Zimmerman, K., Linardic, C.m., Cannon, S., Pastore, A., Patsiogiannis, V., et al. (2020). Detection of iron deficiency in children with Down syndrome. GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 22(2), 317-325 [10.1038/s41436-019-0637-4].
Hart, Sj; Zimmerman, K; Linardic, Cm; Cannon, S; Pastore, A; Patsiogiannis, V; Rossi, P; Santoro, Sl; Skotko, Bg; Torres, A; Valentini, D; Vellody, K;...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/277521
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