scholarly journals Biomarkers and genetic modulators of cerebral vasculopathy in sub-Saharan ancestry children with sickle cell anemia

2020 ◽  
Vol 83 ◽  
pp. 102436
Author(s):  
Marisa Silva ◽  
Sofia Vargas ◽  
Andreia Coelho ◽  
Emanuel Ferreira ◽  
Joana Mendonça ◽  
...  
Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 993-993
Author(s):  
Leon Tshilolo ◽  
George A. Tomlinson ◽  
Patrick T. McGann ◽  
Teresa S. Latham ◽  
Peter Olupot-Olupot ◽  
...  

Introduction. Children with sickle cell anemia enrolled in Realizing Effectiveness Across Continents with Hydroxyurea (REACH, NCT01966731) received open-label hydroxyurea at maximum tolerated dose (MTD) in four countries within sub-Saharan Africa (Tshilolo et al, NEJM 2019;380:121-131). Unlike children in the United States or Europe, a substantial proportion of REACH participants had splenomegaly at enrollment, and more developed splenomegaly while receiving hydroxyurea. Splenic enlargement in association with hydroxyurea treatment in sub-Saharan Africa is previously unrecognized, and its causes and consequences remain unclear. Methods. Palpable splenomegaly was evaluated at both the mid-clavicular and mid-axillary lines at each scheduled and unscheduled sick visit. The size of the spleen, defined as the greatest distance (cm) below the subcostal margin, was recorded in the REDCap trial database at all four clinical sites. Cross-sectional analysis was performed at baseline enrollment using four spleen categories (Not Palpable, 1-4 cm, ≥5 cm, or Splenectomy) with correlations for age, sex, site, growth parameters, alpha-thalassemia trait and G6PD deficiency. This analysis was repeated using the largest spleen size over the first two years on hydroxyurea, but examining two-year laboratory values and also the hydroxyurea dose at MTD, time to MTD, dose-limiting toxicities, and clinical outcomes including acute splenic sequestration, malaria infections, and sepsis. Results. A total of 606 children started hydroxyurea study treatment, including 6 (1.0%) with previous splenectomy, 59 (9.7%) with previous splenic sequestration, and 99 (16.3%) with palpable splenomegaly at enrollment (52 children with 1-4 cm and 47 with ≥5 cm). Large spleens (≥5 cm) were commonly observed at baseline at all clinical sites except Uganda, which identified only 1 child. Compared to those with no palpable spleen, children with large spleens at baseline had similar age and growth parameters, but were significantly more likely to have alpha-thalassemia (78.7% versus 56.2%, P=0.004) and also G6PD deficiency among males (28.0% versus 17.6%, P=0.32). Children with large spleens at enrollment also had a lower hemoglobin (Hb = 6.5 versus 7.3 g/dL, P<0.001) and lower platelet count (platelets = 227 versus 410 x 109/L, P<0.001), but equivalent fetal hemoglobin (HbF = 10.2 versus 9.4%, P=0.82). On hydroxyurea treatment with escalation to MTD, 262 children (43.7%) had palpable splenomegaly recorded, including 120 (20.0%) with spleens ≥5 cm. These large spleens were observed at all four clinical sites, with DRC having the most (52) and Uganda with the least (14). After 24 months of hydroxyurea treatment, laboratory differences were noted according to the cumulative occurrence of splenomegaly including a significantly lower hemoglobin and platelet count, higher absolute reticulocyte count, and lower hydroxyurea dose at MTD (Table). Large spleens were associated with a high cumulative incidence of laboratory dose-limiting toxicities, as well as a significantly higher risk of having clinically symptomatic malaria and receiving blood transfusions (Table). A total of 31 children (5.2%) on hydroxyurea treatment received elective splenectomy, including one partial splenectomy using arterial embolization. Conclusion. Children with sickle cell anemia living in sub-Saharan Africa have an increased risk of having palpable splenomegaly, which is further increased while receiving hydroxyurea treatment. Large spleen at baseline were associated with lower blood counts, consistent with hypersplenism. On hydroxyurea treatment, children with large spleens had significantly lower blood counts and more dose-limiting toxicities, which lowered their eventual hydroxyurea dose at MTD but still led to robust HbF responses. Children with large spleens were also at higher risk of developing malaria infections, receiving transfusions, and requiring surgical splenectomy. Splenic enlargement in association with hydroxyurea treatment was common in children with sickle cell anemia in the REACH trial; its cause remains unclear but the consequences include substantial laboratory toxicity and clinical morbidity. Investigating the etiologies and management of children with chronically enlarged spleens is crucial before expanding hydroxyurea access across Africa for sickle cell anemia. Disclosures Ware: Global Blood Therapeutics: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Bristol Myers Squibb: Other: Research Drug Donation; Nova Laboratories: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; CSL Behring: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Novartis: Other: DSMB; Agios: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Addmedica: Other: Research Drug Donation.


2017 ◽  
Vol 64 (4) ◽  
pp. 859-866 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marisa Silva ◽  
Sofia Vargas ◽  
Andreia Coelho ◽  
Alexandra Dias ◽  
Teresa Ferreira ◽  
...  

Blood ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 102 (3) ◽  
pp. 834-838 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed Cherif Rahimy ◽  
Annick Gangbo ◽  
Gilbert Ahouignan ◽  
Roselyn Adjou ◽  
Chantal Deguenon ◽  
...  

Abstract Clinical severity of sickle cell anemia (SS) in Africa may not be solely determined by genetic factors. This study evaluated the effects of intensive parental education and adequate clinical care on the course of SS in children in Benin. SS children referred to the National Teaching Hospital in Cotonou were included in the study. Teaching about SS was repeated frequently, emphasizing the importance of keeping clinic appointments, improving the nutrition of the affected children, and instituting antipneumococcal and antimalarial prophylaxis. Frequency and severity of SS-related events, changes in physical growth, frequency of malarial attacks, causes of transfusion, and causes of death were the principal variables assessed. 236 young children with repeated SS-related acute complications were studied from July 1, 1993, to December 31, 1999 (983 patient-years). A marked reduction in the frequency and severity of SS-related acute events was observed. Improvement in general status and physical growth was noted in 184 patients (78%); in addition, 22 of the remaining 52 patients showed similar improvement after remotivating the parents for compliance. There were 10 deaths, primarily in this cohort of 52 patients. Intensive sociomedical intervention can produce sustained clinical improvement in many severely ill SS children in sub-Saharan Africa.


Blood ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 112 (11) ◽  
pp. 1431-1431
Author(s):  
Andrea Piccin ◽  
Elva Eakins ◽  
Ciaran V Murphy ◽  
William G Murphy ◽  
Corrina McMahon ◽  
...  

Abstract Microparticles (MP) originate from blebbing and shedding from cell membrane surfaces in physiological and pathological conditions. Increased levels are generated by a number of mechanisms including platelet activation, vascular endothelial damage, thrombin activity, C5b-9 activation, and PF4-heparin-antibody interaction. Increased circulating MP have been described in patients with sickle cell anemia (SCA). Elevated monocyte-derived MP expressing tissue factor have been reported in patients in crisis. The lack of a standardised method for MP quantification remains problematic. We measured MP (numbers and functional markers), protein C and free protein S, in a large cohort of pediatric patients to investigate the role of MP in SCA and their relation to protein C and free protein S plasma levels. One hundred and eleven children of sub-Saharan African ethnicity with SCA (hemoglobin (Hb) SS) were studied: 51 without previous history of crisis in steady state (mean age 5.3 years); 15 in crisis (9 chest crises, 6 other, mean age 5.4 years); 30 on hydroxyurea (mean age 7.2 years); 15 on transfusion therapy (mean age 6.5 years); 17 children of sub-Saharan African ethnicity of similar age (mean age 4.6 years) were used as control group (Hb AA). MP were analyzed by flow cytometry, according to Biró et al (J Thromb Haemost.2004; 2(10):1842–51), using Annexin V and antibodies against, CD61, CD42a, CD62P (P-selectin), CD235a, CD14, CD142 (tissue factor), CD201 (endothelial protein C receptor or EPCR), CD62E (E-selectin), CD36 (thrombospondin or TSP-1), CD47 (TSP-1 receptor), CD31 PECAM (platelet-endothelial cellular adhesion marker), CD144 (VE-cadherin). Protein C (chromogenic) and free protein S (latex based assay) were measured in all subjects. Correlation was measured by Pearson Rank test, and comparisons between groups were analyzed by Mann-Whitney test. Total MP AV were lower in crisis (1.26 × 106/ml; 0.56–2.44 × 106) and steady state (1.35 × 106/ml; 0.71– 3.0 × 106) compared to transfusion (4.33 × 106/ml; 1.6–9.2 × 106p<0.01). Protein C levels were significantly lower in crisis (median 0.52 IU/ml; interquartile range 0.43–0.62) compared to all other groups: HbAA (0.72 IU/ml; 0.66–0.82, p<0.001); hydroxyurea (0.67 IU/ml; 0.58–0.77, p<0.001); steady state (0.63 IU/ml; 0.54–0.70, p<0.05) and transfusion (0.60 IU/ml; 0.54–0.70, p<0.05). In addition levels were significantly reduced in steady state (0.63 IU/ml; 0.54–0.70) compared to HbAA (0.72 IU/ml; 0.66–0.80, p<0.01). Protein S levels were significantly higher in HbAA (0.85 IU/ml; 0.72–0.97) compared with crisis (0.49 IU/ml; 0.42–0.64, p<0.001), hydroxyurea (0.65 IU/ml; 0.56–0.74, p<0.01), and transfusion (0.59 IU/ml; 0.47–0.71, p<0.01). There was also a significant difference in crisis patients compared to steady state (0.49 IU/ml; 0.42–0.64 v 0.68 IU/ml; 0.58–0.79, p<0.05). There was high correlation (R>0.9, p<0.05) between total numbers of Annexin V positive MP (MP AV) and platelet MP expressing non-activation platelet markers. There was a lower correlation between MP AV and MP CD62P (R=0.73, p<0.05) (platelet activation marker), and also a lower correlation between percentage of MP expressing CD201 (%MP CD201) and %MP CD14 (R=0.627, p<0.001). %MP CD201 was higher in crisis (11.6%) compared to HbAA (3.2%, p<0.05); %MP CD144 was higher in crisis (7.6%) compared to transfusion (2.1%, p<0.05); %CD14 (0.77%) was higher in crisis compared to transfusion (0.0%, p<0.05) and steady state (0.0%, p<0.01); MP CD14 was detectable in a higher number of samples (92%) in crisis compared to the rest (40%); %MP CD235a was higher in crisis (17.9%) compared to transfusion (8.9%), hydroxurea (8.7%) and steady state (9.9%, p<0.05); %CD62E did not differ significantly across the groups and CD142 was undetectable. These studies indicate that there are significantly lower levels of protein C and free protein S in children with sickle cell crisis. In addition there are significantly lower numbers of circulating platelet MP in steady state and crisis patients; however in crisis a significantly higher percentage of MP express markers of endothelial and vascular damage, and of red cell origin. Among these are composite hybrid microparticles expressing markers of more than one cell type, probably brought about by severe vascular stress and close contact of various circulating cell types with vascular endothelium.


Blood ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 136 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 20-21
Author(s):  
Emmanuela E. Ambrose ◽  
Luke R. Smart ◽  
Primrose Songoro ◽  
Idd Shabani ◽  
Protas Komba ◽  
...  

Introduction: Sickle cell anemia (SCA) is highly prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa with >300,000 annual births, and substantial morbidity and mortality due to limited resources. The burden of stroke in this population is of particular concern, given the devastating clinical and neurocognitive sequelae of these events. Hydroxyurea, a potent disease modifying therapy for SCA, is safe and feasible for low-resource and malarial endemic countries within sub-Saharan Africa and when used at maximum tolerated dose (MTD), decreases the incidence of acute painful vaso-occlusive events, infections, malaria, transfusions, hospitalizations, and death. Whether hydroxyurea can prevent primary stroke in SCA within Africa has not yet been determined, due in part to lack of stroke screening programs using transcranial Doppler (TCD) ultrasonography. If effective, hydroxyurea would have even more therapeutic benefits for children with SCA, particularly in settings where blood is not available, affordable, or safe. We designed the Stroke Prevention with Hydroxyurea Enabled through Research and Education (SPHERE) trial to determine the stroke risk among Tanzanian children using TCD screening and to investigate the effects of hydroxyurea to reduce that risk. Methods: The SPHERE trial (NCT03948867) is a single center prospective phase 2 open-label screening and treatment pilot study at Bugando Medical Centre, a teaching and referral hospital in Mwanza, Tanzania. Children 2-16 years old with SCA consented to TCD screening by locally trained and certified examiners; recent febrile illness, red cell transfusion, or hospitalization were temporary exclusions. Study participants with maximum Time-Averaged Mean Velocity (TAMV) on TCD exam categorized as conditional (170-199 cm/sec) or abnormal (≥200 cm/sec) are offered hydroxyurea with escalation to MTD, while those with normal TCD screening exams will be rescreened annually. Hydroxyurea is initiated at ~20 mg/kg/day using 500 mg capsules and a weekly dosing calculator, then escalated every 8 weeks by 5 mg/kg/day up to 35 mg/kg/day. Children on hydroxyurea are seen monthly during dose escalation and every 3 months after reaching MTD. The primary endpoint is change in TCD velocity after 12 months of hydroxyurea therapy. Secondary endpoints include changes in splenic volume and filtrative function; change in renal function; incidence of infection, especially malaria; hydroxyurea pharmacokinetics; and genetic modifiers of disease including pharmacogenomics. Results: From April 2019 to April 2020, a total of 202 children underwent TCD screening, exceeding the projected enrollment pace and goal (Figure). The average age (mean ± SD) at enrollment was 6.8 ± 3.5 years, and 53% were female. A majority had previous dactylitis (75%), painful vaso-occlusive episode (93%), blood transfusion (68%), and malaria (89%). Recurrent hospitalization was common with 30% having >5 previous hospitalizations. Only 4% had previously used hydroxyurea. Baseline labs included hemoglobin = 7.8 ± 1.3 g/dL, HbF = 9.3 ± 5.4 %, and ANC = 5.5 ± 2.4 x 109/L. Baseline assessment revealed a palpable spleen in 46 children (23%), and most of these (29) were ≥5 cm below the costal margin. Abdominal ultrasonography documented splenic tissue in 91% of children with an average volume of 101 ± 123 mL (range 8-1045). TCD examinations were performed in all children at enrollment with average TAMV of 148 ± 27 cm/sec [median 144, IQR 130-169 cm/sec] with 76% normal, 21% conditional, 2% abnormal, and 1% inadequate exams. Of 47 children eligible for hydroxyurea for elevated TCD velocities, 45 successfully initiated treatment, while 1 lived too far away for regular visits, and 1 had low blood counts from acute splenic sequestration and died before initiating study treatment. Conclusion: Children with SCA in Tanzania have a high risk for primary stroke. Identification of elevated TCD velocities through screening by local trained certified examiners, coupled with initiation of hydroxyurea treatment with dose escalation to MTD, offers a feasible and affordable means by which to lower TCD velocities and reduce primary stroke risk. Now fully enrolled, SPHERE has built local clinical capacity, research infrastructure and high-quality TCD screening, and will prospectively determine the benefits of hydroxyurea for stroke prevention, as a prelude for expanding hydroxyurea access for children with SCA in Tanzania. Figure Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2017 ◽  
Vol 27 (4) ◽  
pp. 387-391 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Boma Muteb ◽  
J.F.J. Kaluila Mamba ◽  
P. Muhau Pfutila ◽  
V. Bilo ◽  
J.D. Panda Mulefu ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 476-485 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ambroise Wonkam ◽  
Alfred K. Njamnshi ◽  
Dora Mbanya ◽  
Jeanne Ngogang ◽  
Caryl Zameyo ◽  
...  

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