Differential diagnosis of microcytic anemia: the role of microcytic and hypochromic erythrocytes

Int J Lab Hematol. 2015 Jun;37(3):334-40. doi: 10.1111/ijlh.12290. Epub 2014 Sep 2.

Abstract

Introduction: Various indices derived from red blood cell (RBC) parameters have been described for distinguishing thalassemia and iron deficiency. We studied the microcytic to hypochromic RBC ratio as a discriminant index in microcytic anemia and compared it to traditional indices in a learning set and confirmed our findings in a validation set.

Methods: The learning set comprised samples from 371 patients with microcytic anemia mean cell volume (MCV < 80 fL), which were measured on a CELL-DYN Sapphire analyzer and various discriminant functions calculated. Optimal cutoff values were established using ROC analysis. These values were used in the validation set of 338 patients.

Results: In the learning set, a microcytic to hypochromic RBC ratio >6.4 was strongly indicative of thalassemia (area under the curve 0.948). Green-King and England-Fraser indices showed comparable area under the ROC curve. However, the microcytic to hypochromic ratio had the highest sensitivity (0.964). In the validation set, 91.1% of microcytic patients were correctly classified using the M/H ratio.

Conclusions: Overall, the microcytic to hypochromic ratio as measured in CELL-DYN Sapphire performed equally well as the Green-King index in identifying thalassemia carriers, but with higher sensitivity, making it a quick and inexpensive screening tool.

Keywords: Anemia; erythrocytes; hypochromic; iron deficiency; microcytic; thalassemia.

MeSH terms

  • Anemia, Hypochromic / blood*
  • Anemia, Hypochromic / diagnosis*
  • Anemia, Hypochromic / etiology
  • Anemia, Iron-Deficiency / blood*
  • Anemia, Iron-Deficiency / diagnosis*
  • Diagnosis, Differential
  • Erythrocyte Indices*
  • Humans
  • ROC Curve
  • beta-Thalassemia / blood
  • beta-Thalassemia / diagnosis