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Longitudinal effect of disease-modifying therapy on tricuspid regurgitant velocity in children with sickle cell anemia

Parul Rai, Vijaya M. Joshi, Jason F. Goldberg, Amber M. Yates, Victoria Okhomina, Rhiannon R. Penkert, Kenneth I. Ataga, Guolian Kang, Jane S. Hankins

2021Blood Advances14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Elevated tricuspid regurgitant velocity (TRV) ≥2.5 m/s is a predictor of disease severity in adults and children with sickle cell anemia (SCA), but how disease-modifying therapies (DMTs) affect this biomarker is incompletely understood. We investigated the effect of DMTs on TRV elevation in children. In a prospective single-center study, 204 subjects with HbSS or HbSβ0 thalassemia (mean age, 10.6 years; range, 5-18) had echocardiograms with assessment of TRV, with repeat evaluations after 2 years of observation. One-hundred and twelve participants received DMTs (hydroxyurea, n = 72; monthly erythrocyte transfusions, n = 40), 58 did not receive any DMT, and 34 were begun on hydroxyurea during this observation period. In the entire cohort, an increase in hemoglobin of 1.0 g/dL was associated with a 0.03-m/s decrease in TRV (P = .024), and a decrease in absolute reticulocyte count of 1.0 × 106/mL was associated with a 0.34-m/s decrease in TRV (P = .034). Compared with baseline, hydroxyurea exposure (continuous or newly started) was associated with an average 5% decline in mean TRV at the 2-year evaluation. Among participants newly started on hydroxyurea (mean treatment duration 1.2 ± 0.6 years), an increase in hemoglobin of 1.0 g/dL was associated with a 0.06-m/s decrease in TRV (P = .05). We conclude that hydroxyurea therapy may mitigate TRV elevation in children with SCA, possibly as a result of a reduction in hemolysis and improvement in anemia.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSickle cell anemiaHemoglobinFetal hemoglobinInternal medicineAnemiaProspective cohort studyCohortGastroenterologyPediatricsDiseasePregnancyBiologyFetusGeneticsHemoglobinopathies and Related DisordersIron Metabolism and DisordersBlood groups and transfusion