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CHAPTER 11 Sickle cell anemia, thalassemia, and congenital hemolytic anemias KeithQuirolo1&ElliottVichinsky1,2 1DepartmentofHematology/Oncology,UCSFBenioffChildren’sHospitalOakland,Oakland,CA,USA 2DepartmentofPediatrics,UniversityofCaliforniaSanFrancisco,SanFrancisco,CA,USA Eachyear,anestimated300,000infantsarebornwitheitherofthe protectiveagainstmalariawithincreasedprevalenceinsomeareas twomostcommonhemoglobinopathies:thesicklecelldiseasesor oftheworld. Redcelltransfusions areindicated for bothofthese the thalassemias. These inherited diseases are the most prevalent hemoglobinopathies. In sickle cell disease, transfusions prevent monogeneticdisordersworldwide.Sicklecelldiseasemakesup85% and/ortreatcomplicationsandameliorateanemia.Inthethalasse- of the total infants, and thalassemias the remaining 15%. It is mias,transfusionpreventstheanemiaassociatedwithdecreasedor increasingly apparent that sickle cell disease and thalassemia absent hemoglobin production. have become a major health challenge in emerging countries as moreinfantswithhemoglobinopathiessurvivebeyondinfancyand intoadulthood. Malaria,bloodgroups,and Theprevalenceofsignificanthemoglobintrait1(HbS,HbC,Hb hemoglobinopathy E, Hb D, etc., and β thalassemia and α0 thalassemia) varies from Infectionsthatareendemicandlethalinchildrenareparticularly about 1% in all of Europe to as high as 18% in all of Africa; the effectivefortheselectionofmutationsthatprovidesurvivaladvan- prevalence in the American population is 3%. The presence of tage. Malaria is a devastating parasitic disease with a very high disease is 10.8/1000 in Africans, 0.6/1000 in Americans, and 0.2/ mortality rate among children and pregnant women. Due to the 1000inallofEurope.Halfofthepeopleintheworldwithsicklecell high infection and mortality rates, malaria is an extremelystrong disease live in three countries: Nigeria, Democratic Republic of force for selection. It is estimated that worldwide there are three Congo,andIndia.InWestAfrica,about1,000infantsadayareborn billion people at risk for infection; there are 250 million clinical with sicklecelldisease. episodes of malaria and between one million and 500,000 deaths In the world’s population, 1.5% are β thalassemia mutation annually.3 Ninety percent of deaths occur in sub-Saharan Africa, carriers. Hemoglobin E–beta0 thalassemia (Hb E/β0 thalassemia) where many of the hemoglobin polymorphisms and blood group isthegenotyperesponsibleforapproximatelyone-halfofallsevere variants are found. Mutations providing even a slight survival β thalassemia worldwide. The distributions of the phenotype and advantagearenumerous,primarilychangingtheredcellmembrane genotypeofNorthAmericanthalassemiapatientstoday—aswellas and hemoglobin. Without the genetic pressure from malaria, their transfusion management—are dramatically different from human history and the practice of hematology and transfusion those in the past decades.2 The majority of patients, previously medicinewouldbemuchdifferentthantheyaretoday.Anunder- of Mediterranean descent, are now largely of Asian, Indian, and standingofmalariaandthemutationsithascausedlaysafounda- MiddleEasternorigin.2InThailand,about3,000affectedchildren tion for understanding sickle cell disease, thalassemia, and arebornannually,withestimatesofabout100,000livingpatients. transfusion therapy ofthehemoglobinopathies. InsouthernChina,thegenefrequenciesforβ-thalassemiaandfor In Africa between 50,000 and 300,000 years ago, a genetically Hb E are over 4%, resulting in thousands of annual births of β similarspeciestoPlasmodiumfalciparuminfectingwesterngorillas thalassemiamajorandhemoglobinHbE/β0thalassemia.Duetothe jumpedspeciesandinfectedhumans.4Itisthoughtthatallofthe diasporaoccurringinthepastandpresent,sicklecelldiseaseand Plasmodiumspeciesinsub-SaharanAfricajumpedfromchimpan- thalassemiacan nowbe foundin areasthatare freeofmalaria. zees,macaques,andgorillastohumans.However,thedirectionof Sicklehemoglobinisastructuralvariantcausingseverediseasein transfertoNewWorldmonkeyscannotbedeterminedforPlasmo- thehomozygousstateandwhenincombinationwithotherhemo- dium malariae or Plasmodium vivax; the parasite may have been globin variants. The α and β thalassemias are genetically diverse transmitted from humans to monkeys.5 Currently, there are four withmorethan200mutationsaccountingfordecreasedproduction species of malaria parasites infecting humans: P. falciparum, P. ofhemoglobininthoseaffected.Thethalassemiaphenotypevaries vivax,Plasmodiumovale,andP.malariae.P.falciparumisthemost from mild to severe states of anemia. The heterozygote is mildly commonofthesespecies,occurringinabout40%ofinfections.Itis Rossi’sPrinciplesofTransfusionMedicine,FifthEdition.EditedbyTobyL.Simon,JeffreyMcCullough,EdwardL.Snyder,BjarteG.Solheim,and RonaldG.Strauss. ©2016JohnWiley&Sons,Ltd.Published2016byJohnWiley&Sons,Ltd. 126 Chapter11:Sicklecellanemia,thalassemia,andcongenitalhemolyticanemias 127 alsothemostlethal,accountingforthevastmajorityofdeathsand Gerbichbloodgroup13 severe disease. P. vivax may account for another 40% of cases, The Gerbich blood group is expressed on glycophorin C and causingmorbiditybutnotthemortalityofP.falciparum.6Themost glycophorin D. There are 11 antigens in this group. The gene, recentjump7isthefifthspeciesofPlasmodiumtoinfecthumans: GYPC,islocatedonchromosome2,2q14>2q21.Bothglycophorins Plasmodiumknowlesi.Stillconsideredazoonosis,thisPlasmodium areencodedbythisgene.Therearetwoinitiationcodons;initiation sp. has macaque monkeys as a reservoir, and is known to infect atthefirstcodonresultsinglycophorinC;initiationatthesecond human populations in Southeast Asia. P. knowlesi infections are codon results in glycophorin D. These glycophorins interact with reported tobe assevere as thoseofP.falciparum.8 the4.1Rprotein,stabilizingtheredcellmembrane.Areductionof Theassociationbetweenhematologicaldiseaseandmalariawas these antigens leads to hereditary elliptocytosis. Glycophorin C is first noted in the 1940s by Haldane9 in the Mediterranean and oneofthereceptorsofP.falciparum(EBA-140).14Therehavebeen Beet10inAfrica.Sixcommondiseasesareassociatedwithresistance reportsofincreasedGerbichnegativityinthecoastalareasofPapua to malaria:11 thalassemia (both α and β thalassemia), glucose-6- NewGuinea,anareawheremalariaisendemic.Thereisevidence phosphate dehydrogenase deficiency, hemoglobin C, Southeast thattheGerbichphenotypeisassociatedwithmalariainfection.14 Asianovalocytosis,andhemoglobinS.Therearesixbloodgroups Thereisnohomologybetweenthisgroupandtheglycophorinsof with mutations associated with malarial disease: the Duffy blood theMNS system. group, Gerbich blood group, MNS blood group, Knops blood group, and possibly ABO and Lewisblood groups. MNSbloodgroupsystem The MNSblood group system includes three red cellantigens on twoglycophorins.MandNarefoundonglycophorinA,andSon Bloodgroups glycophorinB.ThesetwoglycophorinscarrytworeceptorsforP. The human blood groups are either receptors for the malaria falciparum:EBA-175onglycophorinAandEBA-1onglycophorin parasite or are involved in the rosetting of red cells infected with B.Theglycophorinsareencodedonchromosome4,4q28>4q31in the malarialparasite. sequence GYPA, GYPB, GYPE. These are homologous genes probablyarisingfromGYPA.Thereisnoevidenceofaglycophorin Duffybloodgroup ontheredcellmembranearisingfromGYPE.15TheMNSsystemis TheDuffybloodgroupgenelocus,DARC,isanacronymforDuffy complexwithunequalcrossovers,deletions,geneconversions,and antigenreceptorforchemokine.Thegeneresidesonthelongarmof point mutations leading to 46 different antigens. It is second in chromosome1(1q21-q22).Thegenenotationforthebloodgroupis complexityonly totheRh system. SeeTable 11.2. FY. Polymorphisms are responsible for the Fya and Fyb antigens. These antigens differ in only one amino acid at position 42: Fya Knopsbloodgroup16 glycine, Fyb aspartic acid. There are four common Duffy pheno- The Knops blood group is found on the complement receptor 1 types.WithintheDuffybloodgroupsystem,therearesixseparate (CR1), a glycoprotein present on the red cell as well as other antigens.12 The Duffy antigen is the receptor for P. vivax and P. circulatingbloodcells.CR1isoneofagroupofmembraneproteins knowlesi. The Duffy antigen is also a nonspecific chemokine termedtheregulatorsofcomplementactivation;theyincludedecay receptor. SeeTable 11.1. accelerating factor (DAF/CD55), membrane cofactor protein The merozoite of P. vivax requires the Duffy-binding protein (CD46), and membrane inhibitor of reactive lysis (MIRL/CD59). (PvDBP)inordertobindtotheDARContheredcell.P.vivaxand CR1alsobindsC4b/C3bimmunecomplexesfortransfertotheliver P.knowlesigenesencodeforonlyonebindingprotein;theabsence or spleen where the immune complexes are ingested by macro- of DARC on the red cell is protective against invasion by these phages,returningtheredcellstothecirculation.CR1hasabinding parasites. siteforP.falciparumentryintothehostredcells.CR1andamalaria TheDuffynegativealleleinAfricansistheresultofamutationin redcellmembraneproteinareinvolvedinredcellrosettingduring the erythroid-specific promoter at position 33 of the GATA-1 cerebralmalaria. transcription factor region blocking the expression of the Duffy antigen on red cells. The mutation is in the Fyb allele, designated ABO,Lewisbloodgroups erythroid silent: FyEs. The Duffy antigen remains present on ThereisevidencethatP.falciparuminfluencedthedistributionof somatic cellsin thepresence oftheerythroid silentmutation. theABObloodgroupstofavorgroupOinareaswhereP.falcipa- rum was present.17 Group O decreases the adhesive properties of infectedredcellsrelativetogroupsAandB.18Empirically,thereare higher rosette levels, increased size, and increased adhesion in Table11.1 PrevalenceofDuffyAntigens groups A and AB. Group B patients19 have an intermediate Prevalence% Table11.2 PlasmodiumReceptors RedCell African Phenotype Caucasians Americans Allele Plasmodiumsp. Parasitereceptor Redcellreceptor Fy(a+b�) 20∗∗ 10∗∗ FY∗01/Fy∗01 orFY∗A/FY∗A P.vivax Duffybindingprotein DuffyA,DuffyB Fy(a�b+) 32 20 P.falciparum EBA-175 GlycophorinA(MN) Fy(a+b+) 48 3 P.falciparum EBA-140 GlycophorinC(Gerbich) Fy(a�b�) Rare 67% P.falciparum EBA-1 GlycophorinB(Ss,U) ∗∗70–90%ofAsianshavethismutation;FYBESisthenotationfortheerythroid From:JesseQiao,MD,PowerPointpresentation,UTHealthScienceCenter,January silentGATAmutationprimarilyseeninAfricanAmericans. 28,2013. 128 SectionII:PartI:Redbloodcells levelofrosettes,withthelowestlevelofrosetteformationbeingseen Betathalassemia ingroupOindividuals.Itisproposedthatthedistributionofblood Althoughβthalassemiaisprevalentinmalarialareas,theevidence groupOshouldbehighestinareasofmalariaandlowestinareas forβthalassemiabeingprotectiveagainstmalariaislessconvincing, withoutmalaria,andthatgroupAshouldbelowerintheseareas, primarilyduetothefactthattheareasaroundtheMediterranean whichisindeedthecase.BloodgroupOiscommoninequatorial whereβthalassemiahasbeenprevalentarenowfreeofthemalaria regions, and group A is more common in northern latitudes. parasite. In Africa there are few, if any, published studies of the Infections with severe malaria are more common in group A1 effectofthesickleβthalassemiaphenotypesonsurvivalinpatients versusgroupO,eventhoughgroupOismuchmorecommoninthe with malaria. The majority of β mutations in Africans are β plus populationsstudied.Inhibitionofthiseffectcanbedemonstrated mutations(�88C>Tand�29A>G).InAfricanAmericans,thereare in vitro using soluble A and B antigen, blocking the PfEMP-1 14βmutations.26Thetwomostcommonβplusmutationsarethe receptor.ThiscouldalsooccurinvivoduetotheeffectoftheLewis sameasnoted.ThemostcommonβzeromutationisCodon6�A, genetransferase,whichincreasesthelevelsofAandBantigeninthe alsoseeninAfricans. serum.20ThiswouldaccountfortheincreasedLe(a�b�)seenin individuals withAfrican ancestry. Membranemutation Enzymopathy SoutheastAsianovalocytosis SoutheastAsianovalocytosisdoesnotoccurinAfrica,butheredi- Glucose-6-phosphatedehydrogenase(G6PD) deficiency taryelliptocytosishasaprevalenceofupto1.5%insomepopula- G6PDisexpressedinallcells.Itisthefirstenzymeinthepentose tions.27 There is in vitro evidence that spectrin mutations may impede the entry of P. falciparum into red cells, but there is no phosphate pathway and is responsible for the production of the published clinical evidence ofaneffect onsurvival.28 NADPH needed for the regeneration of reduced glutathione. Reducedglutathioneconvertshydrogenperoxide(H O )towater. 2 2 ItistheonlyNADPHsourceintheredbloodcellprotectingitfrom oxidativedamage.ItislocatedontheXchromosome(Xq28).G6PD Structuralhemoglobinmutations isthemostcommonenzymopathyinhumans.Thediseaseaffects malesandfemaleswhoarehomozygotes;insomecases,G6PDcan HemoglobinE affect heterozygotes due to lyonization. The gene is polymorphic First described in 1954, hemoglobin E is a structural thalassemic with140differentvariants.ThenormalalleleisB.Therearethree mutationthatispredominantinSoutheastAsia.HemoglobinEis allelesinAfrica:B,A,A�.ThetwoAalleleshave85%and12%of the result of a point mutation at codon 26 of the β globin gene normal activity; only the A� allele provides protection against (Glu>Lys).Althoughthisthalassemiaiscommoninmalarialareas, malaria.21 The A allele differs from B by one amino acid, and itisnotclearhowthismutationwouldprotectagainstP.falciparum the A� from A by one amino acid. The A� is always on an A malaria. Thesered cellsmay be lesssusceptible toinvasion.29 background, which may be required for malaria protection. The mostsevereformofG6PDistheMediterraneanallele,alsoaone- HemoglobinC amino-acidsubstitution,producingonly3%activity.Itisfoundin HemoglobinCoccursalmostexclusivelyinWestAfrica,havinga theMediterranean, India, and Indonesia. frequencyof50%intheIvoryCoast.UnlikehemoglobinS,where thereisadisadvantageforthehomozygote,thereappearstobeno selective disadvantage to the homozygote CC or the heterozygote Thalassemia AC. Hemoglobin C is not as effective in the prevention of severe malariacomparedtohemoglobinS,whichisprobablywhyitisnot Alphathalassemia more prevalent in sub-Saharan Africa. Both AC and CC are Alphathalassemiaisthemostcommonsingle-genediseaseinthe protective, with levels of protection differing depending upon world.Fourcommonmutationsleadtoαthalassemia,andallareα reports.30,31 Protection from severe malaria is due to a decreased globingenedeletions.InAfrica,themostcommondeletionis�α3.7. parasitesurvivalinCCcellsandchangesintheredcellsurfacein Thedeletiontypeshavenotbeenstudiedintermsoftheirprotective CC and AC red cells, particularly PfEMP1, leading to decreased effect against malaria. It is assumed they are equally effective. cyto-adherence and an increase in acquired immunity.32 This Homozygous α+ thalassemia (�α/�α) has been found to be theoryhasbeenquestioned33inareportthattherewasnoincrease protective against severe malaria. In some malarial areas, such as in antibody response between AS and AC children infected with partsofIndiaandAsia,theincidenceofhomozygousαthalassemia malaria. The presence of hemoglobin C in the erythrocyte alters is80%.Insub-SaharanAfrica,theincidenceis50%orlessinspiteof the red cell membrane as well as hindering the development of endemicseveremalaria.Thisisthoughttobeduetothenegative P.falciparum withinthe cell.34 effect(negativeepistasis)ofthecombinationofhemoglobinASand αthalassemia.22InchildrenwithhomozygoushemoglobinA,both HemoglobinS the α thalassemia heterozygous23 and homozygous24 forms are HemoglobinS(ß6Glu6Val,GAG>GTG)iscommoninWestand protective.Theprotectiveeffectisadecreaseofdiseaseprogression Central Africa wheremalaria isendemic. Themore prevalent the fromparasitemiatoseveremalaria.Theactualbiologyofthiseffect malaria, the more prevalent is this hemoglobin mutation. Hemo- has not been defined, but there is decreased rosette formation, globinSalsooccursinNorthAfrica,theMediterranean,andIndia. increased phagocytosis,25 and increased immune recognition in α ItisestimatedthatthehemoglobinSmutationoccurredasrecently thalassemiared cells. as 250–700 years or as long ago as 1750 years. The mutation for Chapter11:Sicklecellanemia,thalassemia,andcongenitalhemolyticanemias 129 hemoglobinSoccurredmuchmorerecentlythanthemutationfor Sicklecelldiseaseisbothavasculopathy,withredcelladhesionto hemoglobinC,whichisestimatedtohaveoccurred3000yearsago. thevascularendothelium,andahemolyticanemiawithplasmafree HemoglobinShasbecomethedominantmutationduetosuperior hemoglobinandmicroparticles.Aseachofthesepathologieshasa protection against P.falciparum inthe heterozygote. separatediseasemanifestation,therehasbeenaproposed“pheno- HemoglobinASishighlyprotectiveagainstmalaria.35Arecent typic”modelofsicklecelldiseaseinwhichoneortheotherofthese study36showedthathemoglobinASwas90%effectiveinprevent- features predominates. See Figure11.1. ing malaria in 2591 children with severe malaria compared to a Hemoglobin S can polymerize in the presence of other hemo- groupof2048controlchildreninGhana.Inthisstudy,ACwasonly globin variants as well as hemoglobin A. These combinations are associated with a decrease in cerebral malaria. Although AS is referredtoassicklecelldiseaseiftheycauseclinicalsymptomsor clearlyprotectiveagainstseveremalaria,itisnotknownhowsickle have the potential to cause symptoms. Hemoglobin S combined hemoglobin provides this protection. There are several mecha- with hemoglobin C, DLos Angeles, β thalassemia, OArab, or CHORI nismsthatcouldaccountfortheprotectionaffordedbyAS.Mostof causesymptomaticsicklecelldisease.Theonlycommonhemoglo- the research has been done in areas where P. falciparum is bin-inhibitingpolymerizationishemoglobinF.Thesicklepheno- prevalent. typeisaffectedbycoinheritanceofαthalassemia43andbythelevel RedcellsinfectedwithP.falciparumhaveincreasedpolymeriza- ofhemoglobin F.44 tion of hemoglobin and have an intracellular environment that ThemostcommonsicklecombinationsareSS,SC,Sβ0,andSβ+ decreases parasite growth. This could be due to high levels of thalassemia. β0 refers to a thalassemia major mutation, and β+ potassium, elevated levels ofhemoglobin, ormicroRNA that may refers to a mutation in which there is decreased hemoglobin A reduce growth by inhibiting mRNA transcription in the parasite. production, with S being the dominant hemoglobin. It would be There is also decreased rosetting of infected AS red cells in the expected that S β+ thalassemia would be a relatively benign circulation,likelyduetoareducedexpressionofsurfaceadherence combination, but this is not necessarily true. There are at least proteins. The expression of these adherence proteins, such a P. 14β+mutationscommonlyoccurringinAfricanAmericans.26The falciparum membrane protein-1 (PFWMP1), leadsto cycloadher- mutationsproduceawiderangeofhemoglobinAconcentrationsin ence and increased endothelial activation in infected persons. the red cell, determining the phenotypic expression of this Recently,37 a murine model has shown that heme oxygenase I combination. inductionbyhemolysiswiththeproductionofCOcreatestolerance Even though the genotype of homozygous S is the same, the tomalariaandcouldbeanothermechanismofprotectionprovided phenotype is not.45 There are many variables that influence the byhemoglobinAS.TheexpressionofthehemeoxygenaseIgene, phenotype,46 the level of fetal (F) hemoglobin and an α gene Hmox1,isincreasedbyplasmafreehemoglobin.HemeoxygenaseI deletion being the two most common. However, there are bio- has been shown to be protective in inflammatory disease.38 The markersthatcouldpotentiallychangethephenotypicpresentation protection against severe malaria is due to the effect of carbon of sickle cell disease. Biomarkers in sickle cell disease have been monoxideonsignaltransductionbybindingironintheprosthetic reviewed, and although there are over one hundred variables groups’effectormoleculesandtheinhibitionofhemereleasefrom consideredaspossiblebiomarkersofseverity,onlythemostcom- hemoglobin. There is no decrease in parasitemia, but there is monlyusedlaboratorytestsareclinicallyrelevant:completeblood tolerance induced by heme oxygenase I production of CO. This count with reticulocyte count, renal and hepatic function testing, mechanismcouldalsoexplainthedecreaseinmalariamortalityin and urine albumin–creatinine ratios are the most useful.47 Initial the thalassemias and inG6PD deficiency. steps have been taken in genome-wide surveys to find single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with severity, but clinical relevance has not been found to be associated with most of these HemoglobinSSpathophysiology single nucleotide polymorphisms.48 Unlike homozygous hemoglobin C, which results in the crystalli- Itisusuallynotpossibletopredicttheseverityofachild’scourse zation of hemoglobin at normal oxygen tension, homozygous withsicklecelldisease.InareviewofthedatafromtheCooperative hemoglobinSresultsinhemoglobinpolymerizationatlowoxygen Study of Sickle Cell Disease, pain, persistent leukocytosis, and tension. Polymerization can also occur at low pH and with tem- anemia in children under the age of 24 months were associated perature elevation. Hemoglobin S polymerization distorts the red with poor outcome in the long term.49 Other predictors of poor cellmembrane,disruptingtheasymmetryfoundinthenormalred outcomeinsicklecelldiseaseareanabnormaltranscranialDoppler cellmembrane.Whentheredcellmembranelosesitsasymmetry,39 (TCD) velocity (predicting stroke in children homozygous for phosphatidylserine is exposed on the surface of the red cell. This hemoglobin S or with S β0 thalassemia) or an elevated tricuspid exposureleadstoahypercoagulable40stateandactivatesthecellular jetvelocity onanechocardiogram in adults. elementsofthebloodandvascularendothelium.Thedistortionalso leads to rigidity of the membrane and hemolysis. Hemolysis increases plasma red cell arginase and plasma free hemoglobin, depletingnitricoxide41anddecreasingcyclicguanosinemonophos- Clinicalreviewofsicklecelldisease/ phate. Hemolysis and red cell membrane instability increases red transfusionindications cellmembranemicroparticlesintheplasma.Thesechangesinthe Red cell transfusion has been a therapy for sickle cell disease for redcellmembraneandtheactivationofcellularelementsandthe decades,becomingmoreprevalent sincetheinstitution ofnucleic vascularendotheliumaccountformanyoftheclinicalfindingsin acidamplificationtechnology(NAT),leukoreduction,androutine sickle cell disease. Other modifiers of sickle cell disease42 include red cell phenotyping for transfusion. There are numerous indica- proteins S and C deficiency, α thalassemia,43 fetal hemoglobin tionsfortransfusioninchildrenandadultswithsicklecelldisease. production, nutritional factors, as well as others that influence Reviewedarethemostcommonindicationsfortransfusionanda the phenotypic expression ofsicklecelldisease. briefdescription ofeach. 130 SectionII:PartI:Redbloodcells Figure11.1 “Phenotypic”modelofsicklecelldisease. studyleadingtotheSTOPStudy,therewerestrokesinchildrenwith Cerebrovasculardisease(stroke) TAMMv much less than 200cm/sec.54 It would be prudent to Cerebralvasculardiseaseisthemostcommonindicationforthetransfusionof evaluate patients with MRI–MRA–Perfusion scans and treat childrenwithsicklecelldisease.Strokeandcerebralvasculardiseasecanbe patients with persistently elevated conditional TCD TAMMv prevented by transfusion in children who have an abnormal transcranial with either hydroxyurea (no findings on MR study) or chronic Doppler.Childrenwhohavepreexistingcerebralvasculardiseaseatdiagnosis redcelltransfusion(findingsonMRstudy).Patientswithcerebral willlikelyhaveprogressivecerebralvasculardisease.Thereisanincreasedrisk vascularpathologyshouldbetransfusedforlife.Childrenwhohave of progressive hemorrhagic stroke in adults who are treated with chronic normalTCDstudiescannotbeconsideredatnoriskforstrokeas transfusiontherapyforstroke. MRI–MRA studies have shown ischemia and cerebral vascular disease inthese children as well.55 SeeTable 11.3. Strokeprevention Onceinstituted,transfusiontherapyshouldnotbediscontinued StrokeriskforchildrenwithhomozygoushemoglobinSis200times abruptly. The STOP II study was discontinued by the data safety that for children without sickle cell anemia.50 It is estimated that monitoringboardduetoanincreasedrateofstrokeandreversionto 10%ofchildrenwillhaveastrokebeforetheageof20years.Stroke abnormalTCDinthenon-transfusedgroup.56Theearlyeventsin risk continues with age, with hemorrhagic stroke more common between theages of20and 30years.51 The STOP I study revealed that TCD screening beginning Table11.3 TranscranialDopplerScreening betweentwo andthree yearsofageinchildren withhomozygous hemoglobinSorSβ0thalassemiapredictsincreasedriskofstroke. TAMMv1 Treatment Imaging Theinstitutionofchronicredcelltransfusiontherapyforabnormal Normal <170cm/sec Screenannually Follow2 timed average mean maximum (TAMMv) can prevent brain Conditional 170cm/sec Institutetransfusion BrainMRI–MRA– injury.52 Children with abnormal transcranial velocity (TAMMv therapy perfusionscan Abnormal 200cm/sec Institutetransfusion BrainMRI–MRA– >200cm/sec) frequently have normal brain magnetic resonance therapy perfusionscan imagingandangiography(MRI–MRA),butthisdoesnotindicate they are at decreased risk of stroke. The elevation of the TAMM 1TimedaveragemeanmaximumvelocityperSTOPIstudy. 2ConsiderMRI–MRAatagefiveyearstoscreenforoccultischemicorcerebral velocity is proportional to the risk of stroke.53 In the preliminary vasculardiseasepertheSITstudy. Chapter11:Sicklecellanemia,thalassemia,andcongenitalhemolyticanemias 131 this study may have been related to reticulocytosis following the Transfusion discontinuation of transfusion, although this has not been The goal of transfusion therapy is to decrease hemoglobin S by documented. dilutioninsimpletransfusionandbyremovalofaffectedcellsand Children who appear normal on physical examination and by replacement in red cell exchange. For acute events, the post- history are at risk for so-called silent stroke or occult cerebral transfusion percentage of hemoglobin S is optimally less than infarct.57Thirtypercentofchildrenwithhomozygoushemoglobin 30%. During chronic transfusion, the goal for the pretransfusion S will have evidence of occult infarct on MRI.58 There is an hemoglobinSisbetween30and35%.Thehemoglobinshouldnot undefined increased risk of stroke or increased occult infarcts be above 11g/dl with simple transfusion. With red cell exchange, in these children, even if they have a normal TCD. The risk of the goalfor hemoglobin should be 9g/dl, which in some patients stroke in children with preexisting occult cerebral ischemia was willleadtoareductioninironoverload.Redcellexchangeisthe studied in the SIT Study (Silent Cerebral Infarct Multi-Center preferred initialtreatment foracute stroke. Clinical Trial).59 In this study, it was shown that the risk of a further increase in size (3mm or more) of the initial area of ischemia, or of stroke, was reduced by 58% in the transfusion Ophthalmologiccomplications armcomparedtothecontrolarm.Thiswouldmeanthat13patients Transfusionisindicatedforretinalarterialocclusionwithvisualloss,particularly wouldhavetobetreatedforthreeyearstopreventoneevent.The ifblindnessisapossibility.Transfusionforinvasiveretinalsurgeryisindicated. optimum age and frequency for screening with MRI for occult Lasertherapyforroutinemanagementofsicklecellvascularretinopathydoes ischemicinjuryarenotknown.Bysixyearsofage,theprevalenceof notrequiretransfusion,althoughpatientswithseveresickleretinopathywith brainischemiais27%.TCDaswellasanMRIatMRIatagefive visuallossshouldbeconsideredfortransfusion.HemoglobinSCpatientswould yearsandfurtherMRI–MRA–Perfusionscansifthechilddemon- requireredcellexchangetransfusion. strated soft neurologic signs or had decreased academic achieve- ment atschool. The incidence of retinopathy is the greatest in hemoglobin SC Apreliminarystudyindicatedtherewasanassociationbetween disease(33%)andSβ0thalassemia(13%),andlowestinhomozy- mildlyelevatedbloodpressures,anemia,andsilentinfarct.60Chil- gousS(3%).69Overtheageof30years,43%ofSCpatientsand13% drenwhohaveabnormalsleepstudieswithobstructiveorcentral of SS patients will have retinopathy. Hyphemia70 is a medical apnea are at increased risk for stroke.61 Overall, children with emergency in both sickle cell disease and sickle cell trait causing hemoglobinSShaveacumulativeriskofcerebralvasculardisease glaucoma and blindness. Retinal artery occlusion,71 suspected or of49.9%by theageof14years.62 confirmed, isan indication fortransfusion. Strokeriskisincreasedforatleasttwoweeksfollowinganepisode ofacutechestsyndrome.Posteriorleukoencephalopathyhasbeen reportedwithacutechestsyndrome63andisassociatedwithblood Transfusion transfusion,corticosteroidadministration,andfluidoverloadwith Transfusion is initiated until a definitive diagnosis is determined hypertension. Blood pressures for patients with sickle cell disease and a long-term care plan made. Retinal arterial occlusion is an are lower than normal.64 Blood pressure should be closely moni- indicationforchronictransfusiontherapy.Patientswithhemoglo- toredinpatientswhoarereceivingbloodtransfusionforacutechest bin SC or SS with elevated hemoglobin are transfused by red cell syndrome or another catastrophic event requiring red cell exchange.ThepercentageofhemoglobinSshouldbelessthan40%, transfusion. andforSCitisconvenienttouseagoalofhemoglobinAgreater TheSTOPstudiesshowedthatstrokeriskisdecreasedandacute than60%. strokes can be prevented by chronic red cell transfusion therapy. There is evidence that preexisting cerebral vascular disease is progressive in spite of appropriate chronic red cell transfusion Respiratorydisease72 therapy.65,66TheTWiTCHStudyrevealedthat,inselectedpatients, Thereisnoindicationfortransfusionforobstructiveorrestrictivelungdiseasein switching from transfusion to hydroxyurea did not lead to an patientswithsicklecelldisease.Severelyanemicadultswhohaverestrictivelung increase in the TAMMv on transcranial Doppler compared to diseasemaybenefitfromtransfusiontoimproveoxygenation.Obstructiveor central sleep apnea are risk factors for stroke. Transfusion for central sleep transfusion.Thestudydidnotshowthattherewasequalprotection apneadependsontheclinicalassessment.Echocardiographyshouldbeper- fromstrokewith thischange in therapy. formedtoevaluateforpulmonaryhypertension,andnighttimeoxygenadmin- istrationshouldbeconsidered. Secondarystrokeprevention Overtstrokehasbecomelesscommoninchildrenandyoungadults since the institution of transcranial Doppler screening. Chronic Childrenandadultswithsicklecelldiseaseareatincreasedriskfor transfusion therapy is not completely protective for progressive obstructiverestrictivelung disease andasthma.73 Asthmais a risk cerebralvasculardiseaseandstroke66thatispresentwhentransfu- factorforacutechestsyndromeandforstroke.74Childrenfrequently siontherapyisinitiated.Childrenandadultswhohaveseverebrain presentwithbothrestrictiveandobstructivedisease75onpulmonary injuryfollowingacompletedstrokeshouldbeplacedontransfusion functiontestingwithoutsymptoms.Nitricoxidedepletionoccursin for life. Red cell exchange can eliminate or decrease iron burden both sickle cell disease and asthma.76 Treatment for asthma is inpatientswithovertstrokeonchronictransfusion.67Itshouldbe recommendedforchildrenwithsicklecelldiseasewhohaveahistory thepreferredmethodforchronictransfusiontherapyforsecondary ofacutechestsyndromeandabnormalpulmonaryfunctiontesting.72 prevention of stroke. The SWITCH study would suggest that Children and adults with respiratory disease would benefit from patients who have overt stroke or cerebral vascular disease are hydroxyureatherapytoreducetheincidenceofacutechestsyndrome. morelikelytohaveagoodoutcomewithtransfusionandchelation Tonsillectomyandadenoidectomyforsleepapneawithhypoxia versus hydroxyurea andphlebotomy.68 areconsideredhigh-risksurgeries,andpreoperativetransfusionis 132 SectionII:PartI:Redbloodcells indicated.77 A sleep study will determine whether nocturnal Acutechestsyndrome hypoxia is persistent in a patient who has had a tonsillectomy Acutechestsyndrome87accountsforabout25%ofhospitaladmis- andadenoidectomy.78Nocturnaloxygenadministrationshouldbe sionsandisaleadingcauseofdeathinsicklecelldisease.Recurrent instituted,andthepatientevaluatedforpulmonaryhypertension.In episodesofacutechestsyndromecancauselungscarringleadingto the absence of severe anemia, transfusion is not indicated for restrictivelungdiseaseinchildrenandadultswithsicklecelldisease. patients with abnormalpulmonary functiontesting. Obstructive75 pulmonary disease is common when pulmonary function is formally evaluated. Children and adolescents may not have symptoms ofobstructivedisease. Asthma isarisk factor for Cardiopulmonary: pulmonary hypertension and acute acutechestsyndrome.72Acutechestsyndromeisariskfactorfor chestsyndrome encephalopathy88andstroke.89Acutechestsyndromecandevelop Transfusionforacutechestsyndromecanbelifesaving.Transfusionforpul- within72hoursofapainfuleventinadults.Elevatedphospholipase monaryhypertensionmaybeindicatediftreatmentwithsildenafilisconsid- A2,inconjunctionwithfeverandrespiratorysymptoms,predicts ered,asthereisanassociationbetweentheuseofsildenafilandincreasedpain acute chest syndrome, and expectant transfusion may arrest its in sickle cell disease. Transfusion alone may decrease pulmonary arterial development.90,91 pressure. TheNationalAcuteChestSyndromeStudyGroupreviewedthe commonfeaturesandevaluationofacutechestsyndromeinsickle cell disease.87 Pulmonaryhypertensionhasbeenaknowncomplicationofsickle (cid:129) Patients should be continuously monitored, and transfusion celldiseaseforover30years.79Itisonlyrecently80thatpulmonary should be considered if there is a new infiltrate and oxygen hypertensionhasbecomeamajorfocusinthetreatmentofsickle saturation is lessthan 90–95%. cell disease. The interest has increased as the pathophysiology of (cid:129) Chestpainandlowoxygensaturation,withoutinfiltrate,should pulmonary hypertension has become understood81 and there are bethethresholdforconsideringpulmonaryemboliasacauseof therapies for pulmonary hypertension that were not available these symptoms. previously. Screening by cardiac echocardiogram beginning at theageof10–15yearsisrecommended.Adultswhohavepulmo- nary artery pressures estimated to be 25mmHg (Trjet 2.5m/sec.) Transfusion haveanincreasedriskofmorbidityandmortality.80Patientswith For patients who present with acute chest syndrome and severe pulmonary artery pressures of 30mmHg or higher should be anemia, simple transfusion may be sufficient to increase oxygen- consideredforcardiaccatheterizationtodeterminetruepulmonary ation and reduce risk of more severe disease. Hyperviscosity and hypertension.82 If it is determined that a patient has elevated hypervolemia can complicate simple transfusion.92 Patients who pulmonary pressures with increased pulmonary artery vascular present with an elevated hemoglobin (8g/dl or higher) should resistance, they are considered for treatment. Sildenafil (a phos- receive an exchange transfusion as the initial therapy. Neurologic phodiesterasetype5inhibitor)wasshowntoincreasepainepisodes changes63duringacutechestsyndromearemorefrequentinadults inpatientswithsicklecelldiseaseduringtheWalkPHaSSTStudy, and are an indication for exchange transfusion as stroke risk is which was terminated by the US National Institutes of Health. increased during, as well as following, an episode of acute chest Treatmenthasnotbeenstudiedbeyondsildenafilalone.Onestudy syndrome. There is an association between blood transfusion, ofbosentanshowedthatthistherapywaswelltoleratedinsicklecell corticosteroiduse,andstroke/posteriorleukoencephalopathy,usu- disease.83 ally precipitated byhypertension. Arecentstudy82hasshownthattheincidenceofcardiaccathe- terization-proven pulmonary hypertension is much less frequent thanestimatedbyechocardiogram.Inthisstudy,thosepatientswho Redcellexchangetransfusion werediagnosedashavingpulmonaryhypertensionwereolder,had Red cell exchange transfusion93 is the safest and most effective increased six-minute walk, increased N-terminal pro brain natri- methodoftransfusionforsevereacutechestsyndrome.Itprovides ureticpeptide,andevidenceofincreasedhemolysis.Only1.5%of for isovolumetric red cell exchange without changes in viscosity. 398patientshadincreasedpulmonaryarterialresistance,andonly TheendhematocritandpercentageofhemoglobinSarepredictably 24 had evidence of pulmonary hypertension by capillary wedge obtained. The transfusion goal should be a reduction in the pressure. It is not known what significance elevated echocardio- percentageofhemoglobinSto30%orlesswithanendhematocrit graphictricuspid-regurgitation jetvelocityisinpediatricpatients. of9–10g/dl.Ventilatedpatientsshouldhaveanendhematocritof Inadult patients, itis ariskfactor formorbidity and mortality. 10g/dl. Chronictransfusionforsixmonthsfollowingasevereepisode Transfusion84 of acute chest syndrome is reasonable therapy. Hydroxyurea Fordocumentedpulmonaryarteryhypertension,transfusionalone should be considered for all patients who have had an episode ofacutechestsyndrome,particularlyiftheyhaveobstructivelung hasbeensuccessfulinreducingpulmonaryarterypressuresinsome cases.85 Sildenafil could be added to transfusion if transfusion disease.72 therapy was not effective. In pediatric patients, hydroxyurea has beenfoundtobeeffectiveinasmallstudy.86Thereisnoconsensus Immunedysfunction/sepsisrisk astotheoptimaltherapyfordocumentedpulmonaryhypertension. Aspirin has been recommended for splenectomized patients to Childrenandadultswhoaresepticfrequentlyhaveaprecipitousdropintheir prevent pulmonary hypertension due to platelet aggregation in hemoglobin. Patients who appear septic should have a type and screen at thelungs.Therehavebeennostudiesoftheeffectivenessofaspirin presentationintheeventtheyneedanemergenttransfusion. forthis indication. Chapter11:Sicklecellanemia,thalassemia,andcongenitalhemolyticanemias 133 Infectionremainsthemostcommoncauseofdeathatallagesin priapism during childhood and adolescence, but the actual inci- sicklecelldisease.94Patientswithsicklecelldiseasehavedecreased denceisunknown.Priapismleadstopermanentischemicdamage abilitytoopsonizebacteria,95and95%ofchildrenhomozygousfor and impotence.104 Severe priapism prognosticates a more severe hemoglobinSdevelopfunctionalasplenia96bytheageoffiveyears. course of sickle cell disease.104 Priapism may be induced by FunctionalaspleniaoccursinhemoglobinSCatanolderagewith hemolysis.105 There are no reports of priapism in the setting of muchhigherPITTcounts.97Theincidenceofinfectionisgreatest delayedhemolytictransfusionreactions(DHTRs)orothersettings ininfancyandearlychildhood,thendecreaseswithage.Theeffect ofhemolysis. of pneumococcal vaccine98 and penicillin prophylaxis99 has decreasedtheincidenceofdeathfromoverwhelmingpneumococ- calsepsisinsicklecelldisease.Childrenwithsicklecelldiseaseare Transfusion morelikelytohavebacteremia100withacutechestsyndrome,they Transfusions,bothsimpleandexchange,havenotbeenshownto are at risk for pyelonephritis and urosepsis, and they have an have an effect on acute priapism.106 There have been reports of increasedincidenceofosteomyelitis101withsalmonella.Children neurologiceventswhentreatingpriapismwithexchangetransfu- with sickle cell disease can appear deceptively nontoxic with sion107duetoincreasedviscosityandfluidoverload.Patientswith infectionsthatprovefatal. arenalallograftshouldhaveeithersimpleorexchangetransfusion for graft protection. The hemoglobin should be kept between 9 Transfusion and 10g/dl with a percentage of hemoglobin S between 30 and Intheabsenceofmultiorganfailure,simpletransfusiontomaintain 40%.108 the hemoglobin between 9 and 10g/dl is recommended. Severe sepsis with multiorgan failure would be an indication for red cell Gastrointestinal exchangetodecreasethepercentageofhemoglobinSto30%with an endhemoglobin of9 to10g/dl. Thereisnoindicationfortransfusionasnutritionalsupportforpatientswho havegrowthorpubertaldelay.Transfusion forchildren oradultswhohave hepaticdiseasemaybeindicated. Renaldisease Transfusion for renal disease would include patients with declining renal Common gastrointestinal complications in sickle cell disease are functionandanemiaandpatientswithakidneytransplant.Priapismhasnot cholelithiasis, cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, hepatic sequestra- beenreportedtorespondtotransfusion. tion, and intestinal ischemia.109 Surgical emergencies occur as frequentlyin sicklecell diseaseas inotherpopulations. Renal disease is common in children and adults with sickle cell Hepaticdiseaseisrelativelycommoninsicklecelldisease.110The disease.102Totalrenalbloodflowisincreasedinsicklecelldisease pathology includes viral hepatitis, hepatic sequestration, hepatic duetoanemia,withhyperfiltrationpresentininfantsbyaboutone ironinjury,andintrahepaticcholestasis.111Duringhepaticseques- year of age. Microalbuminuria is present in about 30%of adoles- tration,thetransaminasesareelevatedaswellasthebilirubin,and cents. The inability to concentrate urine (hyposthenuria) is theALT(alanineaminotransferase)canremainelevatedforseveral extremelycommoninsicklecelldisease,andithasbeenreported weeks. Overtransfusion in hepatic sequestration hasledto hyper- tobereversedinchildhoodwithchronictransfusiontherapy.Both viscositymorbidity.112Intrahepatic cholestasis isarare complica- proximalanddistaltubulardiseaseispresentinpatientswithsickle tionofsicklecelldisease.Exchangetransfusionhasbeensuccessful cell disease. Distal tubule dysfunction causes a mild renal tubular insomecases.113Liverbiopsyiscontraindicatedinthepresenceof acidosis. Proximal tubular disease causes an increase in tubular hepaticcongestionandcoagulopathy.Elevationofbilirubinabove secretionmakingcreatinineapoorindicatorofglomerularfiltration 13mg/dlwithapredominantlydirectcomponentcanbeasignof rate.Microscopichematuriaiscommon,frankbleedingcanfollow intrahepaticcholestasis,asometimesfatalcomplicationofsicklecell renal papillary necrosis. Blood loss from renal papillary necrosis disease.111Bilirubinlevelsgreaterthan30mg/dlorhighercanlead mayappeartobesevere,butitgenerallydoesnotrequiretransfu- tohepatorenal syndrome and death. sion. An uncommon complication of papillary necrosis is hydro- nephrosis dueto ureter obstruction. Renal findingsin sicklecell diseaseinclude: Transfusion (cid:129) Decreased abilitytoconcentrate urine; The most common surgical diagnosis in patients with sickle cell (cid:129) Decreased abilitytoexcrete potassium; diseaseischolelithiasis.114Thecomplicationsofthissurgery have (cid:129) Inability tolower urine pH;and beenreported.115Redcellexchangetransfusionmaybeeffectivefor (cid:129) Hematuria/papillary necrosis. intrahepatic cholestasis. Risk factors forrenal failureinclude: (cid:129) Anemia, proteinuria, and hematuria. Skeletal(avascularnecrosis/osteomyelitis) Acuterenalfailurecanoccurinsicklecelldiseaseduringepisodesof sepsis and multiorgan failure. Rhabdomyolysis can occur with Thereisnoindicationfortransfusionforavascularnecrosis ofbone.Hyper- dehydrationandhasbeendescribedduringacutepainfulepisodes. viscosityoccurringduringsimpletransfusioncould,theoretically,contributeto avascular necrosis. Microparticle formation has been implicated in avascular Exchange transfusion and dialysis arelifesaving. necrosis.116 Priapism Priapism is a common symptom in sickle cell disease.103 It is Bone in sickle cell101 disease is a major area of pathology. Bone estimated that as many as 40% of males will have an episode of infarctsareperhapsthemostcommonsourceofsevereacutepainin 134 SectionII:PartI:Redbloodcells patientswithsicklecelldisease.Infarctscancausenervecompres- Transfusion sion,117digitalshorteningfollowingdactylitis,andavascularnecro- Simple transfusion is indicated for anemia due to parvovirus sisofboththeshouldersandthehips.Ribinfarcts118arethoughtto aplasticanemia.Cautioustransfusionforsequestrationwithatarget contribute to acute chest syndrome, sternal infarcts are common, hemoglobin of8–9g/dlis thesafest approachto these patients. andthevertebralbodies119insicklecelldiseaseowetheirpeculiar shape todamagefromnecrosis. Surgery Ithasbeenshowninaprospectiverandomizedtrialthattransfusionpriorto Transfusion surgerydecreasesmorbidityandmortality. Hipreplacementisthemostcommonorthopedicsurgeryinsickle Surgeryiscommoninsicklecelldisease.114Cholelithiasisandosteonecrosisare cell disease.120 Shoulder replacement is much less common.121 themostcommonindicationsforsurgery.Patientswithsicklecelldiseasehave Simple transfusion is recommended in the absence of elevated manyriskfactorsformorbidityduringsurgery:Acutechestsyndromeisthemost hemoglobin,inwhichcasearedcellexchangecouldbeconsidered. common,andsomepatientsmayhavestrokerisk,althoughstrokeasacompli- cationofsurgeryisuncommon.Hyposthenuriacanleadtodehydrationinthe sicklecellpatientsawaitingsurgery.Rhabdomyolysiscanoccurduetodehydration Integument(skinulcers) andprolongedpositioningduringsurgery.Painmanagementisnotusuallya problemfollowingsurgery.Transfusionisthestandardofcareforsurgerywitha Transfusionhasbeenusedtoincreaseoxygenationforpatientswithchronicskin prolongedanesthesiatime.Surgerythathas along anesthesiatimeleadsto ulcers.Thereisbettertherapyfortreatment,althoughtransfusionfollowingskin atelectasis,increasingtheriskofacutechestsyndromepostoperatively. graftingcouldbehelpfultodecreasemicrovascularocclusion. Transfusionguidelinesforsurgeryhavebeenreportedforthegeneralpatient with sickle cell disease, but not for patients who have comorbid condi- tions.77,130,120 Surgical procedures can be classified as low, medium, and Themostcommonproblemoftheskininsicklecelldiseaseisskin highrisk. ulcers.122Theyareusuallyduetoskintrauma,notrecalledbythe (cid:129) Low(transfusionnotindicated):Eyes(laserforretinopathy),skin(minor, patient. There may be a relationship between skin ulceration and biopsy),nose,ears(tympanostomytubes),anddental(whenanesthesiais hydroxyurea inadult patients.123 lessthanonehour,orconscioussedationorlocalanalgesiaisused); (cid:129) Mediumtohigh:Headandneckwithpossibleairwayedema(tonsillectomy- adenoidectomy),genitourinarysystem,andintraabdominal(laparoscopic) Transfusion (whenthegeneralanesthesiaismorethanonehour);and Bloodtransfusionhasbeenusedinthetreatmentofskinulceration. (cid:129) High:intracranial,vertebral,cardiovascular,andintrathoracic,orthe Thereareanecdotalreportsofothertherapies:124vascularflaps,125 anesthesiaisgreaterthanfourhours. specialdressings,126and arginine butyrate.127 Preoperative:HydrationwhenNPO(nilperos),transfusion,teachingthe useoftheincentivespirometer,andexpectationsforcarefollowing Hematologic(severeanemia) surgery.131Undiagnosedasthmaisacommonriskfactorfor perioperativecomplications.Therefore,screeningforbronchoreactive Childrenandadultswithanemiaandalowreticulocytecountduetoinfectionor lungdiseaseandpreventativeuseofbronchodilatorsisrecommended. othercausemaybenefitfromtransfusion.Childrenwithparvovirusinfection Bloodtransfusiontoahemoglobinof10g/dlisrecommendedfor requiretransfusioniftheyhavesevereanemiawithaninadequatereticulocyte mediumandhigh-risksurgeriestopreventcomplications.132For count.Splenicandhepaticsequestrationrequiretransfusion. hemoglobinSCorothersicklecelldiseasepatientswithhemoglobin 10g/dlorhigher,exchangetransfusionshouldbeconsidered, particularlyinpatientswithhemoglobinSS,Sβ0thalassemia,andSC Sickle cell anemia and sickle β0 thalassemia can have significant whoaretohavehigh-riskorprolongedprocedures. anemia.Patientswithsickleβthalassemiahavemicrocytosis,making Intraoperative:133Warmroom,warmblood,andmeticulousfluid thediagnosisofirondeficiencyproblematic.128Aoneortwoαgene management. deletion (always trans in African Americans) will lead to micro- Postoperatively:Painmanagement,fluidmanagement,andevaluationof cytosis.Patients with severe anemia(hemoglobin of5g/dl orless) anyrespiratoryorneurologicsymptoms.Incentivespirometryevery2 hours,andoxygentherapytomaintainoxygensaturationover95%. shouldbetransfusedtoimproveoxygendeliveryandpreventcom- Commonpostoperativecomplicationsofsurgeryinclude:134 plicationsofanemia.Chronicanemiaresultsinavascularoverloaded (cid:129) Acutechestsyndrome; state, and transfusion should be performed cautiously. Patients (cid:129) Fluidoverload; otherwisewellwithabriskreticulocytecountandsafehemoglobin (cid:129) Alloimmunization; canbemonitored.Otheretiologiesofanemiashouldbeconsidered. (cid:129) Rhabdomyolysis;and Achildpresentingwithanenlargedspleenorliverisdiagnosticof (cid:129) Neurologiccomplications. splenic or hepatic sequestration: Both are life-threatening. Parvo- virusisthenextmostcommonetiologyofacuteanemiainchildren. Overtransfusioncanleadtohyperviscosityandmorbiditywhen treating sequestration; blood may be released from the congested Pain organ,increasing thehematocrittodangerously highlevels.Chil- dren who have life-threatening splenic sequestration should be Transfusionasaninterventionforanacute,uncomplicated,painepisodehas transfused on a monthly basis to prevent recurrence and should notbeenstudied.Forpatientswhohavechronicpain,atrialoftransfusionmay have a laparoscopic splenectomy as soon as they have been fully allowpatientstobepainfreewhiletheyarewithdrawnfrompainmedications immunized. There is significant morbidity in children who have and learning other coping skills. It is not recommended that patients be maintainedonbothtransfusionandopioidmedicationsforpainunlessthere hepaticsequestration.Hepatorenalsyndromeshouldbeentertained isaphysiologicindicationsuchasavascularnecrosis. asapossible complication.129 Chapter11:Sicklecellanemia,thalassemia,andcongenitalhemolyticanemias 135 Painisthepathognomonicsymptomofsicklecelldisease.135Pain Table11.4 SickleCellDiseaseIndicationsforTransfusion in sickle cell disease is not necessarily sickle cell vaso-occlusive pain. CerebralVascular Acute pain thatissickle cellrelated includes: Disease (cid:129) Acute painful episodes; Strokeprevention Transfusionbysimpleorredcellexchangefor cerebralvasculardisease,occultbrainischemia, (cid:129) Acute chestsyndrome; abnormalTCD (cid:129) Priapism; Secondarystroke Transfusionbysimpleorredcellexchangeforstroke (cid:129) Cholecystitis (ascending cholangitis); prevention Ophthalmologic Transfusionforarterialinfarct (cid:129) Dactylitis; complications (cid:129) Left upper quadrant pain:splenic sequestration/infarct; Respiratorydisease Noindicationfortransfusion (cid:129) Right upper quadrantpain: hepatic sequestration; Cardiopulmonary (cid:129) Skin ulcer (even before skinbreakdown); disease Pulmonary Redcellexchangeforcatheterizationproven (cid:129) Painwithinternalrotationofthehip:earlyavascularnecrosisof hypertension pulmonaryhypertension hip; and Acutechest Simpletransfusionforlowhemoglobin,redcell (cid:129) Pain with armextension: shoulder avascular necrosis. syndrome exchangeifclinicallysevereorforelevated hemoglobinatpresentation Chronic pain that issicklecell related includes: Immune Simpletransfusionforsevereanemia (cid:129) Avascular (osteo)necrosis (non-acute); dysfunctionsepsis (cid:129) Arthropathies (vertebral infarcts/collapse); Renaldisease Considertransfusionforsevereanemia (cid:129) Legulcers (chronic); Priapism Transfusionnotproveneffective Skeletal Transfusionnoteffective (cid:129) Chronic osteomyelitis; Integument Considertransfusionforsevereanemia (cid:129) Intractable chronic pain; and Severeanemia (cid:129) Neuropathic pain. Parvoviralinfection Simpletransfusionforanemia Splenicsequestration Simpletransfusion Hyperhemolysis Avoidtransfusionifpossible Surgery Transfusiontohemoglobinof10g/dl Transfusion Pain Transfusionnotproventobeeffective Afallinhemoglobinandhyperhemolysiscanoccurduringpainful Pregnancy Rolefortransfusion,redcellexchangemaybe eventsinpatientswithsicklecelldisease.136Transfusionshouldbe beneficial judicially used in the event of anemia occurring during a painful episode.Transfusioncanbeusedduringaperiodofweaningfrom chronic pain medication. It is not recommended to treat chronic Thalassemia pain with both transfusionand opioid. The thalassemias are the most common monogenetic diseases worldwide.146Thesesyndromesareclassifiedaccordingtowhether themutationcausingthedefectaffectstheαglobingeneclusteror Pregnancy137 theβglobingenecluster.Thereisoneβglobingeneclusteroneach There is controversy concerning transfusion during pregnancy. Studies have chromosome 11 (β/β). Duplicated α gene clusters occur on chro- shownthereislittletonobenefittothefetus,butthatmothershavelesspainful mosome 16 (αα/αα). Mutations in the globin genes reduce or events when transfused during the latter half of pregnancy compared to eliminate the synthesis of the respective globin molecule. The nontransfused women with sickle cell disease. 138 Pregnancy carries a high majority of α gene mutations are deletional, although structural riskforthemotherandfetuscomparedtonormalwomen.Maternalcomplica- mutationsoccur.Thereareabout100αgenemutationsreported.β tions occur even in the chronically transfused patient. Chronic transfusion globinmutationsareprimarilypointmutationsleadingtoabsentβ shouldbeconsideredforallwomenduringpregnancy. globinsynthesis(β0mutations)ordecreasedβglobinsynthesis(β+ mutations). There are well over 200 β globin gene mutations. Structural variants of the globin genes can lead to thalassemic Some young women do relatively well with pregnancy,139 but genecombinations.Therearealsodeletionsofβglobinregulatory generally there is an increase in morbidity.140 Pregnancy-related elementsandoftheothergenesintheβglobinclusterthatleadto complications occur more frequently in women with hemoglobin changes in expression of the gamma globin gene (HPFH). The β SS.Transfusionhasbeenofferedtowomeninthelasttrimesterof globin gene cluster is also regulated by genes on distant chromo- pregnancy,butshouldbeofferedearlyifthereisanycomorbidity. somessuch asBCL11A, KLF1, and others. Thereisnoindicationthatthisimprovesfetaloutcome,butitdoes decrease complications for the mother.141–143 A recent study of partialexchangetransfusionsduringpregnancyrevealedthat,even βThalassemia147 withtransfusion,thereisstillanincreaseinmorbidityforwomen β thalassemia presents with a diverse phenotype. Among this group are with sickle cell disease during pregnancy.144 Some studies have individualswhodonotrequireregulartransfusionbutdorequireintermittent shown that red cell exchange transfusion significantly decreases transfusionduringillness,andindividualswhorequirelifelongchronictransfu- morbidity and mortality duringpregnancy.138,145 siontherapy.Thegoaloftransfusionisnormalgrowthanddevelopmentandthe prevention of complications of ineffective erythropoiesis. Iron accumulation fromtransfusionand/orineffectiveerythropoiesisisamajorproblemforpatients Transfusion withβthalassemia. Transfusions for complications of pregnancy are indicated to prevent morbidity and mortality. Consider prophylactic simple red cell transfusion during pregnancy. Red cell exchange may The major predictor of the β thalassemic phenotype is the provide anadditional benefit.See Table11.4. α/β-globin chain imbalance with more severe disease in those

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history are at risk for so-called silent stroke or occult cerebral infarct.57 should be a posttransfusion hemoglobin of 11g/dl for sickle cell anemia and
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