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The incidence of iron deficiency anemia in pregnancy is high in India where iron supplementation is a regular practice. The response to oral iron is influenced by several factors such as age, body mass index, gravida, socioeconomic status, food, vitamin deficiency and compliance to supplements. The major challenge is to understand the various modulators of iron status in this high-risk group so that we can improve the diagnosis and the management of these patients. The current study was designed to evaluate the iron status during pregnancy and to identify factors which might be influencing their response to oral iron. We investigated a total of 181 pregnant women with anemia (Hb< 11 g/dl) and evaluated the impact of probable factors on anemia and their iron status. Assessment of the response was based on hemoglobin and serum ferritin or transferrin saturation level after 8 and 20 weeks of iron supplementation. Socioeconomic, clinical, hematological, biochemical and genetic factors were all evaluated. Molecular analysis revealed that HFE variant allele (G) (rs1799945) was significantly associated with an adequate response to iron supplementation. We identified five subjects with a sustained poor response, and targeted re-sequencing of eleven iron-related genes was performed in them. We have identified seven novel variants in them, and in silico analysis suggested that these variants may have an iron regulatory effect. Taken together, our findings underscore the association of genetic variants with response to supplements in pregnancy, and they can be extended to other diseases where anemia and iron deficiency coexist.
AimsCongenital sideroblastic anaemias (CSAs) are a group of rare disorders with the presence of ring sideroblasts in the bone marrow. Pathogenic variants are inherited in an autosomal recessive/X-linked fashion. The study was aimed at characterising the spectrum of mutations in SLC25A38 and ALAS2 genes in sideroblastic anaemia patients, exploring the genotype-phenotype correlation and identifying the haplotype associated with any recurrent mutation.Patients and methodsTwenty probable CSA patients were retrospectively analysed for genetic variants in ALAS2 and SLC25A38 genes by direct bidirectional sequencing. Real-time PCR was used to quantify gene expression in a case with promoter region variant in ALAS2. Three single nucleotide polymorphisms were used to establish the haplotype associated with a recurrent variant in the SLC25A38 gene.ResultsSix patients had causative variants in ALAS2 (30%) and 11 had variants in SLC25A38 (55%). The ALAS2 mutated cases presented at a significantly later age than the SLC25A38 cases. A frameshift variant in SLC25A38 (c.409dupG) was identified in six unrelated patients and was a common variant in our population exhibiting ‘founder effect’.ConclusionThis is the largest series of sideroblastic anaemia cases with molecular characterisation from the Indian subcontinent.
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