Thalassemias: An Overview Angastiniotis, Michael; Lobitz, Stephan
International journal of neonatal screening,
03/2019, Volume:
5, Issue:
1
Journal Article
Peer reviewed
Open access
Thalassemia syndromes are among the most serious and common genetic conditions. They are indigenous in a wide but specific geographical area. However, through migration they are spreading across ...regions not previously affected. Thalassemias are caused by mutations in the α (HBA1/HBA2) and β globin (HBB) genes and are usually inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. The corresponding proteins form the adult hemoglobin molecule (HbA) which is a heterotetramer of two α and two β globin chains. Thalassemia-causing mutations lead to an imbalanced globin chain production and consecutively to impaired erythropoiesis. The severity of the disease is largely determined by the degree of chain imbalance. In the worst case, survival is dependent on regular blood transfusions, which in turn cause transfusional iron overload and secondary multi-organ damage due to iron toxicity. A vigorous monitoring and treatment regime is required, even for the milder syndromes. Thalassemias are a major public health issue in many populations which many health authorities fail to address. Even though comprehensive care has resulted in long-term survival and good quality of life, poor access to essential components of management results in complications which increase the cost of treatment and lead to poor outcomes. These requirements are not recognized by measures such as the Global Burden of Disease project, which ranks thalassemia very low in terms of disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), and fails to consider that it ranks highly in the one to four-year-old age group, making it an important contributor to under-5 mortality. Thalassemia does not fulfil the criteria to be accepted as a target disease for neonatal screening. Nevertheless, depending on the screening methodology, severe cases of thalassemia will be detected in most neonatal screening programs for sickle cell disease. This is very valuable because: (1) it helps to prepare the affected families for having a sick child and (2) it is an important measure of secondary prevention.
The course of sickle cell disease (SCD) is modified by polymorphisms boosting fetal hemoglobin (HbF) synthesis. However, it has remained an open question how these polymorphisms affect patients who ...are treated with the HbF-inducing drug hydroxyurea/ hydroxycarbamide. The German SCD registry offers the opportunity to answer this question, because >90% of patients are treated according to national guidelines recommending the use of hydroxyurea in all patients above 2 years of age. We analyzed the modifying effect of HbF-related genetic polymorphisms in 417 patients with homozygous SCD >2 years old who received hydroxyurea. HbF levels were correlated with higher total hemoglobin levels, lower rates of hemolysis, a lower frequency of painful crises and of red blood cell transfusions. The minor alleles of the polymorphisms in the γ-globin promoter (rs7482144), BCL11A (rs1427407) and HMIP (rs66650371) were strongly associated with increased HbF levels. However, these associations did not translate into lower frequencies of vaso-occlusive events which did not differ between patients either carrying or not carrying the HMIP and BCL11A polymorphisms. Patients on hydroxyurea carrying the γ-globin promoter polymorphism demonstrated substantially higher hemoglobin levels (P<10-4) but also higher frequencies of painful crises and hospitalizations (P<0.01) when compared to patients without this polymorphism. Taken together, these data indicate that the γ-globin, HMIP and BCL11A polymorphisms correlate with increased HbF in SCD patients on hydroxyurea. While HbF is negatively correlated with the frequency of painful crises and hospitalizations, this was not observed for the presence of known HbF-boosting alleles.
Introduction: Pearson syndrome (PS) was originally reported as a sideroblastic anemia in infancy with vacuolization of marrow precursors and exocrine pancreas dysfunction. It is now recognized as a ...fatal multisystem mitochondrial disorder caused by single mitochondrial DNA deletions (SLSMDs) presenting with anemia. PS, Kearns-Sayre Syndrome (KSS) and progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO) form a continuous spectrum of disease associated with SLSMDs. There have been only a few systematic studies on PS.
Methods: We retrospectively reviewed hematological features and clinical course of 25 children with PS diagnosed between 1987 and 2019.
Results: Patients presented with normo/macrocytic transfusion-dependent anemia (n=25), failure to thrive (n=3), diarrhea (n=1), acidosis (n=1) and/or omphalocele/esophageal atresia (n=1) at a median age of 5 (0-31) months. A median hemoglobin, platelet count and neutrophil count were 6.5 (1.9-9.8) g/dl, 104 (31-300) G/L, and 0.9 (0.1-2.4) G/L, respectively. Bone marrow (n=24) was normo- (n=15) or hypocellular (n=9). Vacuoles in erythroid and myeloid precursors were observed in all patients, but ring sideroblasts were present in only 16 of 23 patients examined. Morphology can resemble Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) because of erythroid hypoplasia (15/21). Dysplastic features are often observed including micromegakaryocytes. Lactic acid was elevated in most patients examined (14/18). Exocrine pancreas insufficiency at diagnosis was documented in 5 patients only. The detection of SLSMDs confirmed the diagnosis of PS in all patients.
The median age at the time of the last follow-up was 47 (7 - 183) months. Among 11 patients with hematological follow-up for more than 3 years after diagnosis, 8 had spontaneous resolution of anemia at a median age of 28 (12-67) months, and 3 died at the age of 3, 6 or 8 years without hematological recovery. Clinical course was highly heterogeneous and various organ dysfunctions appeared. Renal tubulopathy/Fanconi syndrome (n=7) and cardiomyopathy/arrhythmia (n=5) were often fatal complications which developed at the median age of 32 and 45 months, respectively. Failure to thrive/short stature (n=13) and muscle hypotonia (n=9) were commonly observed. Other complications included pancreas insufficiency (n=7), liver dysfunction (n=4), endocrine dysfunctions (n=7), hearing loss (n=1), ophthalmoplegia (n=1), retinitis pigmentosa (n=1), cataract (n=1), ataxia (n=2) and encephalopathy (n=1). Thirteen patients died of acute metabolic acidosis with/without other complications (n=7), arrhythmia (n=2), respiratory failure (n=3) and liver/renal failure (n=1) at the median age of 50 (14-183) months. Two patients developed KSS and PEO-like phenotypes at the age 92 months and 19 months, respectively.
Summary: Anemia is generally the only presenting syndrome of PS. While the bone marrow morphology can resemble DBA or myelodysplastic syndrome, recognition of vacuolated myeloid/erythroid precursors lead to the correct diagnosis of PS in all cases. Other classical signs of PS, ring-sideroblasts and pancreas insufficiency, are often missing. Anemia spontaneously resolves in most patients surviving early childhood. However, PS is unexceptionally fatal (Figure), most patients succumb to metabolic acidosis and various forms of multi-organ failure. Since there is no effective therapy, the diagnosis of PS is one of the saddest news that pediatric hematologists have to break to parents of an anemic infant.
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GEOZS, IJS, IMTLJ, KILJ, KISLJ, NLZOH, NUK, OILJ, PNG, SAZU, SBCE, SBJE, UILJ, UL, UM, UPCLJ, UPUK, ZAGLJ, ZRSKP
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is among the most common genetic disorders in the world, affecting over 300,000 newborns annually, with estimates for further increases to over 400,000 annual births within ...the next generation and with a wider geographical distribution of affected individuals due to global migration ...
Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) is the most common monogenic disorder globally but qualifies as a rare disease in Germany. In 2012, the German Society for Paediatric Oncology and Haematology (GPOH) ...mandated a consortium of five university hospitals to develop a disease management program for patients with SCD. Besides other activities, this consortium issued treatment guidelines for SCD that strongly favour the use of hydroxyurea and propagated these guidelines in physician and patient education events. In order to quantify the effect of these recommendations, we made use of claims data that were collected by the research institute (WIdO) of the major German insurance company, the Allgemeine Ortskrankenkasse (AOK), and of publicly accessible data collected by the Federal Statistical Office (Statistisches Bundesamt, Destatis). While the number of patients with SCD in Germany increased from approximately 2200 in 2011 to approximately 3200 in 2019, important components of the recently issued treatment guidelines have been largely implemented. Specifically, the use of hydroxyurea has more than doubled, resulting in a proportion of approximately 44% of all patients with SCD being treated with hydroxyurea in 2019. In strong negative correlation with the use of hydroxyurea, the frequency of acute chest syndromes decreased. Similarly, the proportion of patients who required analgesics and hospitals admissions declined. In sum, these data demonstrate an association between the dissemination of treatment guidelines and changes in clinical practice. The close temporal relationship between the increased use of hydroxyurea and the reduction in the incidence of acute chest syndrome in a representative population-based analysis implies that these changes in clinical practice contributed to an improvement in key measures of disease activity.