4.3 Article

Reference and Interpretive Ranges for α1-Antitrypsin Quantitation by Phenotype in Adult and Pediatric Populations

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PATHOLOGY
Volume 138, Issue 3, Pages 398-405

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1309/AJCPMEEJK32ACYFP

Keywords

alpha(1)-Antitrypsin; Reference ranges; Reference intervals; Phenotype; Pediatric ranges

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Laboratory evaluation of alpha(1)-antitrypsin (A1AT) deficiency involves measurement of circulating A1AT protein (quantitation) and characterization of A1AT genetic polymorphisms (phenotyping or genotyping). This study compared adult and pediatric A1AT reference ranges in patients with nondeficiency alleles and examined AA1AT concentrations in multiple other phenotypes. A1AT phenotype and quantitation were retrospectively collected on adult (n = 21,444) and pediatric (n = 2,469) samples that were submitted for laboratory evaluation of A1AT deficiency. The 95% reference ranges for normal adult and pediatric populations with the M/M phenotype were determined to be 100 to 273 mg/dL (18.4-50.2,mu mol/L) and 93 to 251 mg/dL (17.1-46.2,mu mol/L), respectively (P < .0001). Decreased concentrations of A1AT correlated with heterozygosity and homozygosity for the S and Z alleles in both the adult and pediatric groups. Other rare alleles, such as I, were also associated with decreased concentrations of A1AT, particularly in the context of a Z allele, and may warrant monitoring for symptoms of deficiency.

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