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The impact of in utero transfusions on perinatal outcomes in patients with alpha thalassemia major: the UCSF registry

Authors :
Marisa E. Schwab
Billie R. Lianoglou
Dawn Gano
Juan Gonzalez Velez
Isabel E. Allen
Regina Arvon
Ahmet Baschat
Diana W. Bianchi
Melissa Bitanga
Anne Bourguignon
Richard N. Brown
Bruce Chen
May Chien
Shareece Davis-Nelson
Monique W. M. de Laat
Supachai Ekwattanakit
Yvonne Gollin
Greigh Hirata
Angie Jelin
Jennifer Jolley
Paul Meyer
Jena Miller
Mary E. Norton
Keith K. Ogasawara
Tachjaree Panchalee
Erica Schindewolf
Steven W. Shaw
Tammy Stumbaugh
Alexis A. Thompson
Dena Towner
Pai-Jong Stacy Tsai
Vip Viprakasit
Emmanuel Volanakis
Li Zhang
Elliott Vichinsky
Tippi C. MacKenzie
Source :
Blood advances, vol 7, iss 2
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2023.

Abstract

Alpha thalassemia major (ATM) is a hemoglobinopathy that usually results in perinatal demise if in utero transfusions (IUTs) are not performed. We established an international registry (NCT04872179) to evaluate the impact of IUTs on survival to discharge (primary outcome) as well as perinatal and neurodevelopmental secondary outcomes. Forty-nine patients were diagnosed prenatally, 11 were diagnosed postnatally, and all 11 spontaneous survivor genotypes had preserved embryonic zeta-globin levels. We compared 3 groups of patients; group 1, prenatally diagnosed and alive at hospital discharge (n = 14), group 2, prenatally diagnosed and deceased perinatally (n = 5), and group 3, postnatally diagnosed and alive at hospital discharge (n = 11). Group 1 had better outcomes than groups 2 and 3 in terms of the resolution of hydrops, delivery closer to term, shorter hospitalizations, and more frequent average or greater neurodevelopmental outcomes. Earlier IUT initiation was correlated with higher neurodevelopmental (Vineland-3) scores (r = −0.72, P = .02). Preterm delivery after IUT was seen in 3/16 (19%) patients who continued their pregnancy. When we combined our data with those from 2 published series, patients who received ≥2 IUTs had better outcomes than those with 0 to 1 IUT, including resolution of hydrops, delivery at ≥34 weeks gestation, and 5-minute appearance, pulse, grimace, activity, and respiration scores ≥7. Neurodevelopmental assessments were normal in 17/18 of the ≥2 IUT vs 5/13 of the 0 to 1 IUT group (OR 2.74; P = .01). Thus, fetal transfusions enable the survival of patients with ATM and normal neurodevelopment, even in those patients presenting with hydrops. Nondirective prenatal counseling for expectant parents should include the option of IUTs.

Details

ISSN :
24739537 and 24739529
Volume :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood Advances
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....52552aeefcf4c76de0c719061d7169ce
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2022007823