Imaging flow cytometry for automated detection of hypoxia‐induced erythrocyte shape change in sickle cell disease

EJ Van Beers, L Samsel, L Mendelsohn… - American journal of …, 2014 - Wiley Online Library
EJ Van Beers, L Samsel, L Mendelsohn, R Saiyed, KY Fertrin, CA Brantner, MP Daniels…
American journal of hematology, 2014Wiley Online Library
In preclinical and early phase pharmacologic trials in sickle cell disease, the percentage of
sickled erythrocytes after deoxygenation, an ex vivo functional sickling assay, has been
used as a measure of a patient's disease outcome. We developed a new sickle imaging flow
cytometry assay (SIFCA) and investigated its application. To perform the SIFCA, peripheral
blood was diluted, deoxygenated (2% oxygen) for 2 hr, fixed, and analyzed using imaging
flow cytometry. We developed a software algorithm that correctly classified investigator …
In preclinical and early phase pharmacologic trials in sickle cell disease, the percentage of sickled erythrocytes after deoxygenation, an ex vivo functional sickling assay, has been used as a measure of a patient's disease outcome. We developed a new sickle imaging flow cytometry assay (SIFCA) and investigated its application. To perform the SIFCA, peripheral blood was diluted, deoxygenated (2% oxygen) for 2 hr, fixed, and analyzed using imaging flow cytometry. We developed a software algorithm that correctly classified investigator tagged “sickled” and “normal” erythrocyte morphology with a sensitivity of 100% and a specificity of 99.1%. The percentage of sickled cells as measured by SIFCA correlated strongly with the percentage of sickle cell anemia blood in experimentally admixed samples (R = 0.98, P ≤ 0.001), negatively with fetal hemoglobin (HbF) levels (R = −0.558, P = 0.027), negatively with pH (R = −0.688, P = 0.026), negatively with pretreatment with the antisickling agent, Aes‐103 (5‐hydroxymethyl‐2‐furfural) (R = −0.766, P = 0.002), and positively with the presence of long intracellular fibers as visualized by transmission electron microscopy (R = 0.799, P = 0.002). This study shows proof of principle that the automated, operator‐independent SIFCA is associated with predictable physiologic and clinical parameters and is altered by the putative antisickling agent, Aes‐103. SIFCA is a new method that may be useful in sickle cell drug development. Am. J. Hematol. 89:598–603, 2014. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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