scholarly journals Early Hydroxyurea Use May be Neuroprotective in Children with Sickle Cell Anemia

Blood ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 138 (Supplement 1) ◽  
pp. 979-979
Author(s):  
Kristine Anne Karkoska ◽  
Amanda Pfeiffer ◽  
Patrick T. McGann

Abstract Introduction: The neurologic changes of sickle cell anemia (SCA) are particularly devastating and include acute stroke, silent infarctions, and cerebral hypoxemia that together result in cumulative damage and significant neurocognitive deficits. Executive functioning and attention are the most commonly reported deficits with individuals with SCA scoring on average ten points lower on measures of full scale intelligence compared to matched unaffected controls, translating to poor academic achievement and later job attainment. Hydroxyurea is the standard-of-care in patients with SCA with a growing body of evidence suggesting a role in neuroprotection. However, although encouraging, until now, the only studies have involved children who began hydroxyurea in grade school, well after the onset of SCA-related neurocognitive decline. Beginning in 2014, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (CCHMC) began treating children with SCA as young as six months with hydroxyurea; these children have had few SCA-related complications and offer a unique population to evaluate the effects of the early introduction of hydroxyurea on neurocognition. Methods: We completed a cross-sectional analysis of the neurocognitive status of our SCA population. Children at least three years old with SCA were enrolled in two cohorts: 1) children with SCA (HbSS and HbS-B 0thalassemia genotypes) who began hydroxyurea before age five years and 2) children with SCA who did not qualify for the first cohort (either on hydroxyurea or chronic transfusions (CTT)). Unaffected controls (siblings of patients with SCA or children seen in the CCHMC primary care clinic) were matched to each patient with early hydroxyurea use by age, race, and sex. All participants completed the NIH Toolbox: Cognition Battery, a shortened neuropsychological evaluation administered using a handheld tablet in the clinical setting, requiring 15-30 minutes. The mean score is 100 and standard deviation 15. We also obtained academic history, demographic variables, and laboratory values for SCA patients. Our overall objective was to compare the neurocognitive status of children with SCA who initiated hydroxyurea before age five years to an unaffected, matched sibling and community control cohort and to historically treated patients followed at the CCHMC sickle cell clinic in order to assess whether the beneficial effects of hydroxyurea extend to neuroprotection. Results: We enrolled 29 patients into the early hydroxyurea SCA group with 24 matched unaffected controls (early hydroxyurea group: mean age 7.2 +/-3.2 years, 52% female). The SCA cohort who initiated disease modifying treatment later in life included 20 patients (mean age 16 +/-5.1 years, 70% female) (Table 1). There were no differences in age, gender, patient education, maternal education, and Area Deprivation Index (ADI, a marker of socioeconomic status) between the early hydroxyurea SCA and control cohorts (Table 1). In the SCA cohort initiating treatment later in life, 5 patients received hydroxyurea, 13 were on CTT for reasons other than for stroke prophylaxis, and 2 received no therapy. The early hydroxyurea use patients and controls scored no differently on the composite cognition score (86 +/-13 versus 88 +/-12, p = 0.6), while the early hydroxyurea patients scored significantly higher than the SCA cohort treated later in life on the composite cognition (versus 77 +/-14, p = 0.03) (Table 2). On a linear regression model, age (p = 0.004) and patient years of education (p = 0.04) were significantly correlated with the composite cognition score when considering all cohorts. When limited to only patients with SCA on hydroxyurea, age (p = 0.005) and patient education (p = 0.002) remained significant, while maternal educational attainment below high school (p = 0.07), hemoglobin (p = 0.07), and fetal hemoglobin (p = 0.07) approached significance. Conclusions: Due to challenges with social determinants of health, children with SCA are already at risk for poor academic performance with early and recurrent "silent" hypoxic events further exacerbating these challenges. If started early in life and maintained through the important early years of brain development, hydroxyurea may be neuroprotective for children with SCA. These data provide further evidence to support the universal prescription of hydroxyurea beginning in the first years of life for all children with SCA. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.

PEDIATRICS ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 84 (3) ◽  
pp. 578-579
Author(s):  
ALBERTO PAPPO ◽  
GEORGE R. BUCHANAN

Acute splenic sequestration crisis is a potentially fatal complication of sickle cell anemia. It is characterized by acute splenic enlargement, with trapping of erythrocytes, causing increasing anemia and the potential for circulatory failure. The development of newborn screening programs aimed at identifying children with clinically significant hemoglobinopathies, combined with early parental education and careful follow-up, has decreased the overall mortality due to acute splenic sequestration crisis and other complications during the early years of life. The purpose of this paper is to report the case of an 8-week-old infant with sickle cell anemia and acute splenic sequestration crisis.


Blood ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (21) ◽  
pp. 1076-1076
Author(s):  
Clarisse Lobo ◽  
Patricia Moura ◽  
Patricia Rio ◽  
Heber Maia ◽  
Juliana Fernandes ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 1076 Background: Sickle cell anemia (SCA) has been associated with impairments in general cognitive functioning as measured by IQ scores and other neurocognitive measures. Children with SCA and overt stroke are the most affected, but those with silent infarcts (SI) on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) also have cognitive impairment. Transcranial doppler ultrasonography (TCD) screening has allowed identification of individuals at high risk for stroke, in whom institution of prophylactic transfusion therapy produces a dramatic reduction in the incidence of primary stroke. Elevated TCD velocities have been reported to predict neurocognitive impairment in patients with SCA. We hypothesize that children with SCA with normal TCD velocities and no overt stroke or SI on brain MRI will have normal cognitive performance when compared with normal-matched controls. We investigated the academic achievement and cognitive function among children with SCA with normal brain MRI and normal TCD velocities, and compared their results with normal age and race matched controls. Methods: School age children with SCA who had normal MRI and TCD exams were evaluated. Controls (classmates and siblings) were matched for race, age, and social-economic status. SCA patients receiving chronic transfusion therapy or with a history of prior overt stroke were not eligible. All participants were followed at Instituto Estadual de Hematologia Arthur de Siqueira Cavalcanti (HEMORIO). All patients and controls underwent MRI examination (to document the absence of stroke and SI) and cognitive testing. In addition, SCA subjects underwent TCD testing and had hematologic laboratory testing. SCA subjects were not experiencing pain or any other complication during study evaluations. The WISC-III was obtained as a measure of intellectual function, and achievement scores in reading, writing, and arithmetic were used to evaluate school performance. Comparisons among patients and controls were made using the Mann-Whitney test. This study was approved by the HEMORIO Ethics committee and all participants signed informed consent. Results: SCA patients had significantly lower total IQ and academic achievement than healthy controls (Table). Discussion: This is the first report showing cognitive dysfunction in children with SCA with both normal MRI and TCD examination. Early neurocognitive deficits are known to occur in children with SCA. In general, a patient with SCA in Brazil has a low socioeconomic status, low educational level, and poor access to health services, placing these children at higher risk of neurocognitive complications from the disease. Our study shows that children with SCA perform worse on measures of key cognitive function when compared with healthy matched controls, even without evidence of elevated velocities in the main cerebral arterial vessels or radiological insult to the brain. There was a significant difference in total IQ and school achievement among SCA patients and controls; however this was not true for verbal or executive IQ, suggesting that the cognitive compromise in this population is global. Cognitive dysfunction may occur long before lesions are observed on the MRI (ischemic insult) or on the TCD (vasculopathy), underscoring the need for preemptive screening and treatment of cognitive dysfunction in children with SCA. Disclosures: Off Label Use: Hydroxyurea for prevention of neuropsychological changes in SCD.


Author(s):  
Christopher A. Miller ◽  
Bridget Carragher ◽  
William A. McDade ◽  
Robert Josephs

Highly ordered bundles of deoxyhemoglobin S (HbS) fibers, termed fascicles, are intermediates in the high pH crystallization pathway of HbS. These fibers consist of 7 Wishner-Love double strands in a helical configuration. Since each double strand has a polarity, the odd number of double strands in the fiber imparts a net polarity to the structure. HbS crystals have a unit cell containing two double strands, one of each polarity, resulting in a net polarity of zero. Therefore a rearrangement of the double strands must occur to form a non-polar crystal from the polar fibers. To determine the role of fascicles as an intermediate in the crystallization pathway it is important to understand the relative orientation of fibers within fascicles. Furthermore, an understanding of fascicle structure may have implications for the design of potential sickling inhibitors, since it is bundles of fibers which cause the red cell distortion responsible for the vaso-occlusive complications characteristic of sickle cell anemia.


2005 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 85
Author(s):  
Allison Elise Kerr ◽  
Wolali Odonkor ◽  
Gail Nunlee-Bland ◽  
Juanita Archer ◽  
Anitha Kolukula ◽  
...  

1974 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 529-532 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. S. Lessin

1974 ◽  
Vol 133 (4) ◽  
pp. 690-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. R. Serjeant

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