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Research Article

Accuracy of a portable hemoglobinometer (HemoCue) to measure fetal hemoglobin values during in utero transfusion

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Article: 2266092 | Received 03 Jun 2022, Accepted 27 Sep 2023, Published online: 15 Oct 2023
 

Abstract

Objectives

The current recommended treatment for severe fetal anemia is in utero transfusion (IUT). During this procedure, the evaluation of the necessary volume of transfused blood is based on regular measurement of fetal hemoglobin (FHb) concentration. The gold standard measurement is performed in the biology laboratory. A rapid medical test such as HemoCue® is an effective way to predict FHb concentration. It would reduce the time to obtain results and therefore the procedure duration. To evaluate the accuracy of HemoCue® to measure FHb during IUT, we compared Hb levels obtained by HemoCue® and by our biology laboratory.

Methods

This retrospective study involved all pregnant women who had undergone an IUT in the university hospital of Clermont-Ferrand, France, during the period from 1 January 2010 to 6 June 2021. The FHb level was evaluated by two methods, a rapid medical test, HemoCue®, and a standard method in the biology laboratory.

Results

We obtained 244 pairs of results from HemoCue® and our laboratory, of 90 IUT procedures. The correlation between the two sets of results was excellent, with Lin’s concordance correlation coefficient of 0.979. However, we established that the measurements were not significantly modified by IUT number, puncture time, cause of fetal anemia, estimated fetal weight, gestational age, and delay between two IUT or middle cerebral artery peak systolic velocity values.

Conclusion

Our results allowed to extend the relevance of FHb measurements by HemoCue® during IUT.

Author contributions

Amélie Delabaere: lead author, fetal medicine specialist to perform IUT. Maeva Guerard: coauthor, creation of the database, carrying out statistical analyses. Romain Cahierc: fetal medicine specialist to perform IUT. Bruno Pereira: bio-statistician. Damien Bouvier: biologist contributing to the development of techniques. Gallot Denis: fetal medicine specialist to perform IUT.

Disclosure statement

The authors report there are no competing interests to declare.

Additional information

Funding

The author(s) reported there is no funding associated with the work featured in this article.