The aim of this prospective study was to evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of hydroxyurea (HU) in patients with sickle cell disease (SCD). Thirty-four patients with sickle cell anemia (hemoglobin S [HbS]/HbS), 131 with HbS/ 0 -thal, and 165 with HbS/ ؉ -thal participated in this trial. HU was administered to 131 patients, whereas 199 patients were conventionally treated. The median follow-up period was 8 years for HU patients and 5 years for non-HU patients. HU produced a dramatic reduction in the frequency of severe painful crises, transfusion requirements, hospital admissions, and incidence of acute chest syndrome. The probability of 10-year survival was 86% and 65% for HU and non-HU patients, respectively (P ؍ .001), although HU patients had more severe forms of SCD. The 10-year probability of survival for HbS/ HbS, HbS/ 0 -thal, and HbS/IVSI-110 patients was 100%, 87%, and 82%, respectively, for HU patients and 10%, 54%, and 66%, for non-HU patients. The multivariate analysis showed that fetal hemoglobin values at baseline and percentage change of lactate dehydrogenase between baseline and 6 months were independently predicted for survival in the HU group. These results highlight the beneficial effect of HU, which seems to modify the natural history of SCD and raise the issue of expanding its use in all SCD patients. (Blood.
A decade of screening (years 2000 to 2010) for hemoglobinopathies in 3,931 patients was performed at the General Hospital of Poligiros, Halkidiki, Northern Greece. Among the patients examined, 10.8% heterozygotes for β-thalassemia (β-thal) were found, as well as 4.1% with sickle cell disease and 1.2% with double β-thal/Hb S [β6(A3)Glu→Val] heterozygosity. Iron deficiency was observed in 23.4%. The geographical distribution in the region revealed a substantial incidence of hemoglobinopathies even in mountainous areas. This pattern did not follow the typical distribution according to the malaria hypothesis, as incidence did not dovetail with swamp locations recorded in the past. The HBB gene mutations for 85 patients were also analyzed. Most prevalent in Halkidiki, Northern Greece, was the codon 39 (C>T) mutation (27.1%) followed by the IVS-I-110 (G>A) mutation (22.4%); this was in direct contrast to the current distribution of the same mutations seen in the rest of Greece (Greek National Genetic Database, GNGD). This frequency inversion was statistically significant, with the difference from the GNGD being 20.6% for the IVS-I-110 mutation (p <0.0005) and 7.6% for the codon 39 mutation (p = 0.0238). The history of Halkidiki, denoting a clear example of geographical isolation from the rest of the country, may possibly account for a potentially diverse genetical identity of the disease in this region.
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