| Literature DB >> 34011966 |
Raheel Iftikhar1, Parvez Ahmad2, Regis de Latour3, Carlo Dufour4, Antonio Risitano5,6, Naeem Chaudhri7, Ali Bazarbachi8, Josu De La Fuente9, Britta Höchsmann10, Syed Osman Ahmed7, Usama Gergis11, Alaa Elhaddad12, Constantijn Halkes13, Bassim Albeirouti14, Sultan Alotaibi15, Austin Kulasekararaj16, Hazzaa Alzahrani7, Tarek Ben Othman17, Simone Cesaro18, Ali Alahmari7, Rawad Rihani19, Salem Alshemmari20, Amir Ali Hamidieh21, Mohamed-Amine Bekadja22, Jakob Passweg23, Murtadha Al-Khabori24, Walid Rasheed7, Andrea Bacigalupo25, Qamar-Un-Nisa Chaudhry2, Per Ljungman26,27, Judith Marsh16, Riad El Fakih7, Mahmoud Aljurf7.
Abstract
Aplastic anemia is a relatively rare but potentially fatal disorder, with a reported higher incidence in developing countries in comparison to the West. There are significant variations in epidemiological as well as etiological factors of bone marrow failure syndromes in the developing countries in comparison to the developed world. Furthermore, the management of bone marrow failure syndromes in resource constraint settings has significant challenges including delayed diagnosis and referral, limited accessibility to healthcare facilities, treatment modalities as well as limitations related to patients who require allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Here we will provide a review of the available evidence related to specific issues of aplastic anemia in the developing countries and we summarize suggested recommendations from the Eastern Mediterranean blood and bone marrow transplantation (EMBMT) group and the severe aplastic anemia working party of the European Society of blood and marrow transplantation (SAAWP of EBMT) related to the diagnosis and therapeutic options in countries with restricted resources.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34011966 DOI: 10.1038/s41409-021-01332-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bone Marrow Transplant ISSN: 0268-3369 Impact factor: 5.483