4.7 Article

Degree of anemia, indirect markers of hemolysis, and vascular complications of sickle cell disease in Africa

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 130, Issue 20, Pages 2215-2223

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2016-12-755777

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Funding

  1. Laboratory of Excellence GrEx, Sorbonne Paris Cite University

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The hyperhemolysis paradigm that describes overlapping hyperhemolytic-endothelial dysfunction and high hemoglobin-hyperviscous subphenotypes of sickle cell disease (SCD) patients is based on North American studies. We performed a transversal study nested in the CADRE cohort to analyze the association between steady-state hemolysis and vascular complications of SCD among sub-Saharan African patients. In Mali, Cameroon, and Ivory Coast, 2407 SCD patients (1751 SS or sickle beta-zero-thalassemia [S beta(0)], 495 SC, and 161 sickle beta(+) -thalassemia [S beta(+)]), aged 3 years old and over, were included at steady state. Relative hemolytic intensity was estimated from a composite index derived from principal component analysis, which included bilirubin levels or clinical icterus, and lactate dehydrogenase levels. We assessed vascular complications ( elevated tricuspid regurgitant jet velocity [TRV], microalbuminuria, leg ulcers, priapism, stroke, and osteonecrosis) by clinical examination, laboratory tests, and echocardiography. Afteradjustment for age, sex, country, and SCD phenotype, alow hemoglobin level was significantly associated with TRV and microalbuminuria in the whole population and with leg ulcers in SS-S beta(0) adults. A high hemolysis index was associated with microalbuminuria in the whole population and with elevated TRV, microalbuminuria, and leg ulcers inSS-S beta(0) adults, but these associations were no longer significant after adjustment for hemoglobin level. In conclusion, severe anemia at steady state in SCD patients living in West and Central Africa is associated with elevated TRV, microalbuminuria, and leg ulcers, but these vascular complications are not independently associated with indirect markers of increased hemolysis. Other mechanisms leading to anemia, including malnutrition and infectious diseases, may also play a role in the development of SCD vasculopathy.

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