| Literature DB >> 27062606 |
Nathalie Couque1, Delphine Girard2,3, Rolande Ducrocq1, Priscilla Boizeau2, Zinedine Haouari4,5, Florence Missud4,5, Laurent Holvoet4,5, Ghislaine Ithier4,5, Marie Belloy6, Marie-Héléne Odièvre7, Michel Benemou8, Patricia Benhaim9, Brigitte Retali10, Philippe Bensaid11, Brigitte Monier12, Valentine Brousse13, Roger Amira14, Christine Orzechowski15, Emmanuelle Lesprit16, Laurent Mangyanda17, Nathalie Garrec18, Jacques Elion1,3,19, Corinne Alberti2,3,20, André Baruchel3,4,21, Malika Benkerrou4,5,20.
Abstract
We conducted a retrospective study on newborns with sickle-cell disease (SCD), born 1995-2009, followed in a multicentre hospital-based network. We assessed patient outcomes, medical care and compliance with the national guidelines published in December 2005. Data from 1033 patients (742 SS/Sβ°-thalassaemia) with 6776 patient-years of follow-up were analysed (mean age 7·1 ± 3·9 years). SCD-related deaths (n = 13) occurred only in SS-genotype patients at a median age of 23·1 months, mainly due to acute anaemia (n = 5, including 2 acute splenic sequestrations) and infection (n = 3). Treatment non-compliance was associated with a 10-fold higher risk of SCD-related death (P = 0·01). Therapeutic intensification was provided for all stroke patients (n = 12), almost all patients with abnormal transcranial Doppler (TCD) (n = 76) or with >1 acute chest syndrome/lifetime (n = 64) and/or ≥3 severe vaso-occlusive crises/year (n = 100). Only 2/3 of patients with baseline haemoglobin <70 g/l received intensification, mainly for other severity criteria. Overall, hydroxycarbamide was under-prescribed, given to 2/3 of severe vaso-occlusive patients and 1/3 of severely anaemic patients. Nevertheless, introduction of the on-line guidelines was concomitant with an improvement in medical care in the 2006-2009 cohort with a trend towards increased survival at 5 years, from 98·3% to 99·2%, significantly increased TCD coverage (P = 0·004) and earlier initiation of intensification of therapy (P ≤ 0·01).Entities:
Keywords: hydroxycarbamide; mortality; newborn screening; sickle cell disease; transfusion
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27062606 DOI: 10.1111/bjh.14015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Haematol ISSN: 0007-1048 Impact factor: 6.998