Relationship between hemoglobin, hemolysis, and transcranial Doppler velocities in children with sickle cell disease: Results from a long‐term natural history study in Italy in the era of multimodal therapy

Author:

Reggiani Giulia1,Coppadoro Beatrice1,Munaretto Vania1,Pieroni Alessio2,Viaro Federica2,Manara Renzo3,Beaubrun Anne4,Biffi Alessandra1,Baracchini Claudio2,Sainati Laura1,Colombatti Raffaella1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Hematology Oncology Unit, Department of Woman's and Child's Health Azienda Ospedale‐Università di Padova Padua Italy

2. Stroke Unit and Neurosonology Laboratory Azienda Ospedale‐Università di Padova Padua Italy

3. Department of Neuroscience Azienda Ospedale‐Università di Padova Padua Italy

4. Global Health Economic and Outcomes Research, Medical Affairs Global Blood Therapeutics, Inc South San Francisco USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundStroke and cerebral vasculopathy are leading causes of morbidity and mortality in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). Transcranial Doppler (TCD) is a reliable and validated predictor of stroke risk. Children with conditional or abnormal TCD are at an increased risk for stroke, which can be mitigated by red blood cell transfusion or hydroxyurea. Elucidating the relationship between cerebral hemodynamics and hemolytic anemia can help identify novel therapeutic approaches to reduce stroke risk and transfusion dependence.MethodsThis long‐term, real‐world study was designed to evaluate the prevalence of TCD imaging (TCDi)‐assessed flow velocities in children and to interrogate their relationship with markers of anemia and hemolysis.ResultsIn total, 155 children (median follow‐up 79.8 months, 1358.44 patient‐years) had 583 evaluable TCDi results. Only patients with HbSS or HbSβ0 had abnormal (1.6%) or conditional (10.9%) TCDi. Children with abnormal or conditional TCDi had lower hemoglobin (Hb) and higher hemolysis markers. A linear correlation was detected between TCD velocity and Hb: an Hb increase of 1 g/dL corresponded to decreases in velocity in the internal carotid and middle cerebral arteries (6.137 cm/s and 7.243 cm/s). Moreover, patients with Hb >9 g/dL presented a lower risk of TCDi‐associated events.ConclusionThese results support the need to optimize disease‐modifying treatments that increase Hb and reduce hemolysis for stroke prevention in young children with SCD.

Funder

Fondazione Città della Speranza

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology,General Medicine

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