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Sickle cell disease is an inherited disease characterized by the presence of an abnormal haemoglobin. It is the more prevalent genetic disease at birth in Ile-de France area. Sickle cell disease can be complicated by acute vaso-occlusive crisis, chronic visceral involvement related to ischemic process, and infectious complications. In adults, acute vaso-occlusive crisis is the major clinical problem prompting admission to hospital and the main cause of death. It mainly manifests by osteoarticular pain and acute chest syndrome and can be complicated by multiorgan failure. Acute vaso-occlusive crisis can be also manifested by priapism, ischemic or haemorrhagic stroke, or abdominal pain. The main treatment of severe acute vaso-occlusive crisis is based on transfusion.
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PMID:[Emergencies in adults with sickle cell disease]. 1558 59

BACKGROUND: Asthma and sickle cell disease are common conditions that both may result in pulmonary complications. We hypothesized that children with sickle cell disease with concomitant asthma have an increased incidence of vaso-occlusive crises that are complicated by episodes of acute chest syndrome. METHODS: A 5-year retrospective chart analysis was performed investigating 48 children ages 3-18 years with asthma and sickle cell disease and 48 children with sickle cell disease alone. Children were matched for age, gender, and type of sickle cell defect. Hospital admissions were recorded for acute chest syndrome, cerebral vascular accident, vaso-occlusive pain crises, and blood transfusions (total, exchange and chronic). Mann-Whitney test and Chi square analysis were used to assess differences between the groups. RESULTS: Children with sickle cell disease and asthma had significantly more episodes of acute chest syndrome (p = 0.03) and cerebral vascular accidents (p = 0.05) compared to children with sickle cell disease without asthma. As expected, these children received more total blood transfusions (p = 0.01) and chronic transfusions (p = 0.04). Admissions for vasoocclusive pain crises and exchange transfusions were not statistically different between cases and controls. SS disease is more severe than SC disease. CONCLUSIONS: Children with concomitant asthma and sickle cell disease have increased episodes of acute chest syndrome, cerebral vascular accidents and the need for blood transfusions. Whether aggressive asthma therapy can reduce these complications in this subset of children is unknown and requires further studies.
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PMID:Asthma is a risk factor for acute chest syndrome and cerebral vascular accidents in children with sickle cell disease. 1566 85

Sickle cell anaemia (SCA) is the most common cause of childhood stroke, occurring with the highest frequency before the age of 6 years. Despite the relative frequency of stroke in SCA, few predictors of risk exist. Anaemia, leucocytosis, hypertension, silent infarction, and history of acute chest syndrome are well-documented risk factors for ischaemic stroke in SCA. Recent data suggest that other environmental and genetic factors, many unrelated to SCA, influence the development of cerebrovascular disease. Non-invasive assessment of individual stroke risk using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography has provided a means of selecting and prophylactically treating SCA children at highest risk. With the ultimate goal of preventing stroke, the information gained from the studies reviewed here may lead to improved prediction of stroke so that clinical trials to assess risk-based therapy may be carried out on selected children with SCA.
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PMID:Defining stroke risk in children with sickle cell anaemia. 1661 14

Little is known about patterns of hydroxyurea (HU) use by community-based hematologist/oncologists (H/Os) for the treatment of sickle cell disease (SCD). Determination of these practice patterns pertaining to adult SCD patients was the focus of this study. A self-administered survey was mailed to H/Os in two southeastern states. Replies were received from 70% of eligible physicians. This study focuses on responses from 184 community H/Os and a comparison group of 30 university-based/affiliated H/Os providing ongoing care for at least 3 SCD patients/month. The majority of community H/O respondents saw less than 3 SCD patients/month. HU was prescribed by more than half (55%) of community H/Os in at least 10% of their patients. The most common reasons cited for prescribing HU include frequent painful crises (76%), chronic pain with frequent narcotic use (58%), and acute chest syndrome (43%). Although the majority of community H/Os care for few patients with SCD, the reported indications for HU were consistent with currently accepted recommendations. However, community H/Os reported acute chest syndrome, stroke, and pulmonary hypertension as indications for HU less often than the academic H/O group. Barriers to wider use of HU include physician concerns about carcinogenic potential, doubts about HU effectiveness, perceived patient apprehension about adverse effects, concern about lack of contraceptive use, and patient compliance. Further resources should focus on updating physicians on recently published material supporting the effectiveness of HU in symptomatic SCD as well as providing management guidelines to optimize the use of HU.
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PMID:Hydroxyurea therapy for sickle cell disease in community-based practices: a survey of Florida and North Carolina hematologists/oncologists. 1592 7

The application of evidence-based medicine to the management of adults with sickle cell disease (SCD) is currently primarily driven by clinical expertise and patient preference, as there is a paucity of randomized controlled trial (RCT) data to guide decision-making. A summary of SCD management principles in the areas of health care maintenance, transfusion therapy, treatment and prevention of painful episodes, acute chest syndrome, stroke, renal disease, contraception and pregnancy, and priapism is predominantly based on the authors' interpretation of available observational studies as well as the opinions of experts in SCD. RCTs impacting current practices address use of hydroxyurea to prevent painful episodes and acute chest syndrome, intensity of pre-operative transfusion, transfusion during pregnancy, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor therapy for proteinuria, but most issues in adult SCD care have not been rigorously studied and management may not be appropriately extrapolated from pediatric data. While challenging clinical problems need to be addressed by RCTs, there is also the need for development of practice guidelines using formal methodological strategies. This brief review is not a substitute for the process but provides a literature-based approach to making treatment decisions when caring for adults with SCD.
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PMID:An evidence-based approach to the treatment of adults with sickle cell disease. 1630 60

Dactylitis or hand-foot syndrome is related to intravascular sickling and classically occurs around 6 months of life when haemoglobin S levels reach pathological significance. It has been hypothesised as a possible predictive factor of adverse outcome. The objective of this study was to estimate the survival without severe events (acute chest syndrome, stroke or death) according to early occurrence of dactylitis in the sickle cell paediatric cohort of Guadeloupe. The study period was 1 January 1984 to 31 December 1999. Medical data were recorded from birth for children with sickle cell anaemia diagnosed before 6 months of age. The Kaplan-Meier method was used to estimate the severe event-free survival and to draw related curves. We used proportional-hazard modelling to assess the risk of severe events (stroke or acute chest syndrome or death) in children with early dactylitis (before 6 months of age). The study sample comprised 114 children. The incidence [95% confidence interval] of clinical events per 100 child-years were 10.0 [7.63, 13.07] for dactylitis, 0.73 [0.33, 1.62] for stroke, 10.88 [8.35, 14.17] for acute chest syndrome and 1.06 [0.56, 2.05] for death. Thirteen of the 14 children who had dactylitis before 6 months of age had at least one severe event later in life. The median severe event-free survival time was 2.1 [1.6, 2.7] years in children with dactylitis before 6 months compared with 6.3 [4.5, 8.1] years in the other children; P < 0.0005. After adjustment for haemoglobin level <or=7 g/dL (25th percentile), leucocyte count >19 000/mm3 (75th percentile), transfusion before age of one year, acute splenic sequestration before the age of one year, the adjusted hazard ratio of severe event for children with early dactylitis was 2.13 [1.06, 4.40]; P < 0.03. Dactylitis occurring before 6 months of life identifies children at risk of severe complications who should benefit from close management.
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PMID:Early onset dactylitis associated with the occurrence of severe events in children with sickle cell anaemia. The Paediatric Cohort of Guadeloupe (1984-99). 1642 Mar 42

Human parvovirus (HPV) B19, a common infection, frequently causes transient red cell aplasia in children with hemolytic anemia, such as sickle cell disease (SCD). It was considered to be a self-limited condition, easily treated with blood transfusion. However, acute splenic sequestration, acute chest syndrome, nephrotic syndrome, and stroke have been reported in SCD patients following HPV B19 infection. We report a 3-year-old child with SCD who developed fulminant myocarditis following HPV B19-related aplastic crisis. The diagnosis of myocarditis should be considered in a patient with hemolytic anemia with an infection with HPV B19 who develops signs of cardiopulmonary failure despite correction of anemia.
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PMID:Life threatening parvovirus B19 and herpes simplex virus associated acute myocardial dysfunction in a child with homozygous sickle cell disease. 1670 44

Sickle cell disease represents a spectrum of inherited hemoglobin disorders. The pathophysiology involves abnormalities not just in red blood cells but also vascular endothelium, white blood cell function, coagulation, and inflammatory response. Known sequelae of sickle cell disease include invasive infections, painful episodes, acute chest syndrome, strokes, and chronic pulmonary hypertension. Preventive strategies that decrease the risk of infection are the routine use of daily antibiotics until five years of age, immunization of children with the 7-valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine in addition to the 23-valent polysaccharide pneumococcal vaccine, annual influenza vaccination after six months of age, and meningococcal vaccination after two years of age. A significant advance in stroke prevention is the use of transcranial Doppler ultrasonography to identify asymptomatic, at-risk children who should be considered for chronic blood transfusions. Chronic transfusion therapy for primary or secondary stroke prevention requires careful surveillance for iron overload and chelation therapy. Patients with chest pain, fever, or respiratory symptoms and new pulmonary infiltrates require aggressive medical management for acute chest syndrome. Pain management still represents an important area for aggressive treatment using sickle cell disease-specific guidelines. Newer treatments include hydroxyurea therapy to decrease the frequency of painful episodes and associated comorbidities, and hematopoietic cell transplantation for a limited subset of patients. Family physicians play a crucial role in instituting evidence-based preventive care strategies, initiating timely treatment of acute illness, recognizing life-threatening episodes, and providing a medical home for multidisciplinary management.
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PMID:Opportunities to improve outcomes in sickle cell disease. 1688 29

Sickle cell anemia (SS) is highly phenotypically variable, and early predictors of outcome could guide clinical care. To determine whether early vaso-occlusive complications predicted subsequent adverse outcomes in the Dallas Newborn Cohort, we studied all members with SS or sickle-beta0-thalassemia who presented in their first year of life and had 5 years or more of follow-up. We defined 3 potential early predictors: hospitalizations in the first 3 years of life for (1) painful events other than dactylitis, (2) dactylitis, and (3) acute chest syndrome (ACS). We studied the associations of these predictors with the following late adverse outcomes (occurring after the third birthday): death, first overt stroke, use of disease-modifying therapy, and hospitalizations for pain events and ACS. None of the early events predicted death or stroke. Early pain and ACS both predicted a modest, temporary increase in the number of later painful episodes, but early ACS strongly increased the odds of more frequent ACS throughout childhood. Dactylitis had limited utility as a predictor. Although we still lack a useful prognostic framework for young children with SS, those who experience early ACS might be candidates for higher risk interventions to mitigate or cure their disease.
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PMID:Prognostic significance of early vaso-occlusive complications in children with sickle cell anemia. 1694 Apr 26

Hemolysis, long discounted as a critical measure of sickle cell disease severity when compared with sickle vaso-occlusion, may be the proximate cause of some disease complications. New mechanistic information about hemolysis and its effects on nitric oxide (NO) biology and further examination of the subphenotypes of disease requires a reappraisal and deconstruction of the clinical features of sickle cell disease. The biology underlying clinical phenotypes linked to hemolysis may increase our understanding of the pathogenesis of other chronic hemolytic diseases while providing new insights into treating sickle cell disease. The pathophysiological roles of dysregulated NO homeostasis and sickle reticulocyte adherence have linked hemolysis and hemolytic rate to sickle vasculopathy. Nitric oxide binds soluble guanylate cyclase which converts GTP to cGMP, relaxing vascular smooth muscle and causing vasodilatation. When plasma hemoglobin liberated from intravascularly hemolyzed sickle erythrocytes consumes NO, the normal balance of vasoconstriction:vasodilation is skewed toward vasoconstriction. Pulmonary hypertension, priapism, leg ulceration and stroke, all subphenotypes of sickle cell disease, can be linked to the intensity of hemolysis. Hemolysis plays less of a role in the vaso-occlusive-viscosity complications of disease like the acute painful episode, osteonecrosis of bone and the acute chest syndrome. Agents that decrease hemolysis or restore NO bioavailability or responsiveness may have potential to reduce the incidence and severity of the hemolytic subphenotypes of sickle cell disease. Some of these drugs are now being studied in clinical trials.
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PMID:Deconstructing sickle cell disease: reappraisal of the role of hemolysis in the development of clinical subphenotypes. 1708 51


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