To study the potential of multivariate classification methods in order to obtain more insight into abnormal laboratory data from patients with
sickle cell disease, we investigated standard haematological and clinical chemical variables of 18 controls and 37 apparently healthy persons with heterozygous
sickle cell disease (
Hb AS), all women, using both univariate and multivariate classification methods. In the univariate method, those with
Hb AS showed decreased serum log
aspartate aminotransferase (log AST) activity, mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular haemoglobin (MCH) and increased
sodium concentration. The multivariate method identified
sodium,
potassium,
urea,
uric acid, log AST,
alanine aminotransferase and MCH as the variables that produced maximal separation between persons with
Hb As and controls. It increased the 'non-error rate' for classification of persons with
Hb AS by 16.4% compared with classification based on the variable, MCH, that produced maximal separation by the univariate method. The frequency distribution of percentage Hb S in the
Hb AS group proved bimodal with maximal separation at 37.0% Hb S. The subgroup with 37.0% or less (n = 16) was considered to have concomitant heterozygous alpha-thalassaemia-2. In the univariate method the subgroup characterized by greater than 37.0% Hb S (n = 21) had increased serum
sodium and
uric acid concentrations, perhaps related to sickle cell nephropathy, whereas the subgroup with less than or equal to 37% Hb S did not. The multivariate method added information to the univariate method by additionally identifying abnormalities in serum
potassium and
urea concentrations in the former subgroup.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)