Browsing by Author "Hafiza A."
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Publication Molecular characteristic of alpha thalassaemia among patients diagnosed in UKM medical centre(Malaysian Society of Pathologists, 2014) ;Azma R.Z. ;Ainoon O. ;Hafiza A. ;Azlin I. ;Noor Farisah A.R. ;Nor Hidayati S. ;Noor Hamidah H. ;Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences ;Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia (USIM)Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) Medical CentreAlpha (α) thalassaemia is the most common inherited disorder in Malaysia. The clinical severity is dependant on the number of α genes involved. Full blood count (FBC) and haemoglobin (Hb) analysis using either gel electrophoresis, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) or capillary zone electrophoresis (CE) are unable to detect definitively alpha thalassaemia carriers. Definitive diagnosis of α-thalassaemias requires molecular analysis and methods of detecting both common deletional and non-deletional molecular abnormailities are easily performed in any laboratory involved in molecular diagnostics. We carried out a retrospective analysis of 1623 cases referred to our laboratory in Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia Medical Centre (UKMMC) for the diagnosis of α-thalassaemia during the period October 2001 to December 2012. We examined the frequency of different types of alpha gene abnormalities and their haematologic features. Molecular diagnosis was made using a combination of multiplex polymerase reaction (PCR) and real time PCR to detect deletional and non-deletional alpha genes relevant to southeast Asian population. Genetic analysis confirmed the diagnosis of α-thalassaemias in 736 cases. Majority of the cases were Chinese (53.1%) followed by Malays (44.2%), and Indians (2.7%). The most common gene abnormality was αα/--SEA (64.0%) followed by αα /- α 3.7 (19.8%), - α 3.7/--SEA (6.9%), αα/αα CS (3.0%), --SEA/--SEA (1.2%), - α 3.7/- α 3.7 (1.1%), αα/-α4.2 (0.7%), -α 4.2/--SEA (0.7%), -α3.7/-α 4.2 (0.5%), αα CS/-- SEA (0.4%), αα CS/ααCd59 (0.4%), ααCS/αα CS (0.4%), -α3.7/αα Cd59 (0.3%), αα/ααCd59 (0.1%), αα Cd59/ ααIVS I-1 (0.1%), -α3.7/ααCS (0.1%) and --SEA /αα Cd59 (0.1%). This data indicates that the molecular abnormalities of α-thalassaemia in the Malaysian population is heterogenous. Although α-gene deletion is the most common cause, non-deletional α-gene abnormalities are not uncommon and at least 3 different mutations exist. Establishment of rapid and easy molecular techniques is important for definitive diagnosis of alpha thalassaemia, an important prerequisite for genetic counselling to prevent its deleterious complications. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Prenatal diagnosis of aneuploidies in amniotic fluid by multiple ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) analysis(Malaysian Society of Pathologists, 2014) ;Hamidah N.H. ;Munirah A.R. ;Hafiza A. ;FARISAH A.R. ;Shuhaila A. ;Norzilawati M.N. ;Jamil M.Y. ;Ainoon O. ;Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences ;Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) Medical CentreUniversiti Sains Islam Malaysia (USIM)Prenatal diagnosis is essential in the new era of diagnosis and management of genetic diseases in obstetrics. Multiple ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) is a recent technique for prenatal diagnosis for the relative quantification of 40 different nucleic acid sequences in one single reaction. We had utilized the MLPA technique in detecting aneuploidies in amniotic fluid samples from 25 pregnant women from the Obstetrics and Gynaecology Department UKMMC, versus the quantitative fluorescent polymerase chain reaction (QF-PCR) method. Conclusive results were obtained in 18 cases and all were concordant with that of the QF-PCR. All four cases of trisomies were correctly identified including one case with maternal cell contamination. � 2014, Malaysian Society of Pathologists. All rights reserved.