J A Olaniyi1, O G Arinola2, A B Odetunde3. 1. Department of Haematology, University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria. 2. Department of Chemical Pathology; University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria. 3. IMRAT, College of Medicine, University of Ibadan.
Abstract
AIM: Elevated HbF, among other biological and environmental factors, is responsible for decrease in mortality in sickle cell anaemia (SCA). This study determined the levels of HbF in adult SCA patients in steady state compared with HbAA controls. HbF was discussed in line with the clinical course of the disease so as to emphasize the relevance of hydroxyurea in the management of adult SCA patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The HbF levels of 66 confirmed SCA patients and 31 HbAA controls were estimated using Betke method and HbF percentage was calculated using formula: %HbF percentage = A413 filtrate x 100A413 standard x 20. RESULT: A statistical significant difference in the mean of the levels of HbF in patients (5.16±4.04) compared to controls (1.04±0.44) (p = 0.000) was observed. The mean levels of HbF for males (4.71±3.49) compared to that of females (4.99) were statistically similar (p =0.773). It was also observed that the mean HbF level appears to be declining as age advances. SCA patients were classified to three categories viz: HbF <2% (21.2% SCA patients); HbF of 2.1% -10%, (68.2% SCA patients); and HbF of 10.1% -16%, (10.6% SCA patients). CONCLUSION: Substantial proportion of our patients actually will require treatment with hydroxylurea to stimulate HbF production especially those with HbF percentage of <2 and some with HbF percentage of 2.1 - 10%. HPFH may be considered rare since only 10. 6% had HbF at the range of 10.1-16%. This study showed that in treating our SCA patients in Nigeria we need to adopt and encourage the use of HbF activating agents like hydroxyurea or any other safe agent that will be found to stimulate HbF production in SCD patients.
AIM: Elevated HbF, among other biological and environmental factors, is responsible for decrease in mortality in sickle cell anaemia (SCA). This study determined the levels of HbF in adult SCA patients in steady state compared with HbAA controls. HbF was discussed in line with the clinical course of the disease so as to emphasize the relevance of hydroxyurea in the management of adult SCA patients. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The HbF levels of 66 confirmed SCA patients and 31 HbAA controls were estimated using Betke method and HbF percentage was calculated using formula: %HbF percentage = A413 filtrate x 100A413 standard x 20. RESULT: A statistical significant difference in the mean of the levels of HbF in patients (5.16±4.04) compared to controls (1.04±0.44) (p = 0.000) was observed. The mean levels of HbF for males (4.71±3.49) compared to that of females (4.99) were statistically similar (p =0.773). It was also observed that the mean HbF level appears to be declining as age advances. SCA patients were classified to three categories viz: HbF <2% (21.2% SCA patients); HbF of 2.1% -10%, (68.2% SCA patients); and HbF of 10.1% -16%, (10.6% SCA patients). CONCLUSION: Substantial proportion of our patients actually will require treatment with hydroxylurea to stimulate HbF production especially those with HbF percentage of <2 and some with HbF percentage of 2.1 - 10%. HPFH may be considered rare since only 10. 6% had HbF at the range of 10.1-16%. This study showed that in treating our SCA patients in Nigeria we need to adopt and encourage the use of HbF activating agents like hydroxyurea or any other safe agent that will be found to stimulate HbF production in SCDpatients.
HbF (α2 γ2), the main haemoglobin component in the foetus, is present at levels of 65 to 90% at birth and
usually drops to less than 2% by 6 to 12 months of
age(. HbF levels may also be elevated as a result of
genetic abnormalities of haemoglobin production or
because of haemopoietic stress.After birth, the HbF- gama-gene is switched down
and the HbA beta-gene is switched on so that adults
mainly produce HbA (α2 β2). After this developmental
switch, low levels of HbF are still produced, and this
is distributed heterogeneously with some red cells (F
cells) expressing more HbF than others (. The level
of HbF, and the associated proportion of F cells, is a
highly heritable trait(, and within a normal papulaton
the distribution of HbF is much skewed. Most
healthy individuals produce <0.6% HbF distributed
among 1–7% F cells, but a small proportion (about
2%) produce up to 5% HbF and 25% F cells and such
individuals are said to have heterocellular hereditary
persistence of fetal Hb (hHPFH) (. SCA patients with
high HbF levels not only have less severe clinical course,
but also have mild clinical complications because an
increase in haemoglobin F inhibits polymerization of
sickle haemoglobin.The varying levels of foetal haemoglobin in erythrocytes
account for a larger part of clinical heterogeneity observed in patients with sickle cell anaemia(. It is
also a major prognostic factor for several clinical complications.
(The strong relationship existing between percentage
HbF level and disease severity in SCA suggests that
baseline measurement of percentage HbF is paramount
in predicting important aspects of clinical course and
in advocating usage of hydroxyurea, which is in low
ebb in Nigeria, in order to achieve as much as 40%
reduction in mortality long observed in SCA by
Steinberge et al in 2003 (
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Subjects
Ninety seven subjects were enrolled. This included 66
SCA patients in steady state attending Medical Out
Patient clinic who were consecutively recruited into
the study after an informed consent. Also, 31 consenting
healthy, HbAA adults were enrolled into the study.
These were medical health workers or voluntary blood
donors.
Sample Collection
Five milliliters of venous blood was collected by clean
venepuncture from each patient via the ante-cubital
vein using a plastic syringe with minimum stasis, into
commercially prepared concentrations of sequestrene
ethylene di-amine tetra-acetic acid (EDTA) bottles.
Each sample was mixed gently and thoroughly to ensure
anticoagulation and to prevent cell lysis. One milliliter
of this blood was used to prepare haemolysate
for HbF estimation and haemoglobin electrophoresis
using Cellulose acetate at pH 8.6 to confirm HbA and
HbS status.
Methodology
Measurement of HbF was done using the Betke
method (. HbF percentage was calculated using the
formula: % HbF = A413 filtrate x100 A413 standard x
20
Statistical Analysis
Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS 15.0.
Results were expressed as mean ± SD. The difference
between mean was compared using the Student’s t
test.
RESULTS
Ninety seven subjects made up of 66 diagnosed SCA
(HbS) and 31 normal HbA controls were recruited.
In the 66 SCA patients, 28 were males while 38 were
females with a mean age of 27.9±10.4 (age range 15
to 60 years). The control subjects have a mean age of
30.6±8.1 years. There was no statistically significant
difference in age of the controls and the patients (p =
0.314).The mean HbF level for the control was 1.04±0.44
(range 0.2- 1.7) while the mean for the SCA patients
was 5.16±4.04. The difference in the mean HbF when
compared was statistically significant (p = 0.000). In
the SCA patients; the mean for males of 4.71 was
slightly lower than the mean for females 4.99 although
not statistically significant. (p = 0.773).While the mean HbF in the controls fall within normal
range of <1.5%; 45(68.2%) of the SCA patients has a
raised HbF of within the range of 2.1%-10% and
7(10.6%) had HbF >10%. (Table 2). Table 1 also
showed the mean HbF level per particular age range, highlighting a steady decline in the mean HbF levels as
age advances.
Table 2:
Shows stratification of Levels of HbF according to degree of elevation and age group in SCD patients.
HbF Level Age/years
< 2%
2.1%-10%
> 10%
Total
<20
1(1.5%)
9(13.6%)
1(1.5%)
14(16.7%)
21-30
3(7.6%)
27(40.9%)
5(7.6%)
8(56.1%)
31-40
3(4.5%)
7(10.6%)
0(0%)
7(15.2%)
>40
5(7.6%)
2(3.0%)
1(1.5%)
8(12.5%)
Total1
4(21.2%)
45(68.2%)
7(10.6%)
66(100%)
Table 1:
Mean HbF in different age Groups in SCA patients.
Age
HbSS
Mean HbF(%)
<20
11(16.7%)
5.05±3.89
20-30
37(56.1%)
5.42±4.22
30-40
10(15.2%)
3.93±2.83
>40
8(12.1%)
3.29±3.82
Total
66(100%)
5.16±4.04
DISCUSSION
Foetal haemoglobin, a heritable traits in adults accounting
for substantial phenotypic diversity of sickle cell
disease; was estimated in both control subjects (HbAA
and known HbSS patients in steady state for comparison.
The mean haemoglobin F (HbF) level expected
in HbAA controls is supposed to be <1.5%( and the derived mean of 1.04 in this study was within
normal. Earlier studies obtained a mean foetal haemoglobin
level of 6.4±4.0% ( and 7.4±3.6% ( but
the mean HbF of 5.16 in this study is slightly lower
than both earlier values. However, the mean HbF of
patients obtained in this study is in agreement with
previous studies (. Although, the mean of HbF in
females of 4.99 was slightly higher than that of males
(4.71), there was no statistically significant difference
(p = 0.773). This finding may not agree with comparative
survival curve analysis study which found that
male HbSS patients had a better overall prognosis than
females ( .Another local study found a statistically
higher level of HbF in males than females. (Sickle cell anaemia (SCA) was the first human monogenic
disorder to be characterized at the molecular
level ( and up to this moment there is yet to be a
cure. It results from the substitution of glutamic acid
by valine at position 6 of the beta-chain of haemoglobin.
The clinical manifestations of SCD arise from
the tendency of sickle haemoglobin to polymerize at
reduced oxygen tensions and deform red cells into
the characteristic rigid sickle cell shape. Such inflexible
red cells cannot pass through the microcirculation efficiently,
and this results in anaemia (due to destruction
of the red cells) and intermittent vaso-occlusion causing
tissue damage and pain (. This watershed arising
from sickled haemoglobin is inhibited in patients with
elevated HbF level.Although all patients with SCA have exactly the same
molecular defect, there is considerable clinical variation,
ranging from death in early childhood (, to a
normal life span with few complications( due to the
influence of genetic modifiers of SCA like co-existence
of á –thalassemia (. Therefore, patients with
increased levels of HbF often tend to have a relatively
mild clinical course ( because HbF reduces the tendency
of HbS to polymerize within the red cell. This
highlights the need to determine HbF along with HbA2
in assisting to differentiate HbSS, HbS-beta-thalassemia
and HbS-HPFH and hence determination of
HbA2 and HbF should graduate from research activity
to routine tool in order to project the management
of SCA to a level where the clinical course among
others could be easily predicted at diagnosis.Genetic studies have established that increased HbF
level may result from rare deletions within the betaglobin
gene cluster or from point mutations in the
promoters of the fetal gamma-globin genes (hereditary
persistence of fetal haemoglobin, HPFH), however,
additional loci are known to increase HbF levels
in adult life, which has been identified using combination
of genome-wide analysis within a large kindred( and within twin pairs(, leading to identification of
two quantitative trait loci (QTL) with major influences
on fetal hemoglobin levels in adults. Lettre et al
( had
shown that a significant proportion of the variation in
HbF levels and the frequency of painful crises in patients
with SCA, are accounted for by five common
single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) at these loci.
A pharmacologic agent, Hydroxyurea, ( produced and
in use since 1994), and its effectiveness was affirmed
when a large multicenter, randomized, double blind
placebo study in America of 299 subjects showed that
the drug significantly reduced not only the frequency
and severity of painful crises, but also the incidence of
acute chest syndrome, and blood transfusion requirements
(. Its precise mechanism of action is unknown
but it causes an increase in fetal haemoglobin concentrations
in most subjects by physically interfering with
the polymerization process of deoxyhaemoglobin S.
Although hydroxyurea is not a cure for sickle cell disease
but it should, at present, be offered to our severely
affected SCA patients since the risk of severely
symptomatic disease and early death is correlated with
the fetal haemoglobin concentration (. The drug will
be beneficial to 21% of SCA patients in this study
whose %HbF levels fell below 2% and some of the
68.2% with %HbF ranging between 2.1%- 10.0%.It is highly imperative to always estimate not only the
levels of HbF, but also of HbA2 so as to be able to
clearly define the clinical course of every sickle cell
disease patient. Resource poor countries should be
assisted to equip their haemoglobinopathy laboratories
to be able to have and use freely, equipments like
Isoeletric focusing, High Performance Liquid Chromatographic
(HPLC) studies and radial immunodiffusion,
that will distinctly separate and quantify all haemoglobin
variants.
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