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Differences in lung function between children with sickle cell anaemia from West Africa and Europe

Authors :
Enrico Petoello
Luigi Castriotta
Sharon Ndoro
Emma Raywood
Michele Arigliani
Paola Cogo
Ashel Dache Sunday
Livingstone Gayus Dogara
Katy Vecchiato
Ramatu Zubair
Chiara Zuiani
Baba Inusa
Atul Gupta
Mario Canciani
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

IntroductionLung function abnormalities are common in sickle cell anaemia (SCA) but data from sub-Saharan Africa are limited. We hypothesised that children with SCA from West Africa had worse lung function than their counterparts from Europe.MethodsThis prospective cross-sectional study evaluated spirometry and anthropometry in black African individuals with SCA (haemoglobin phenotype SS) aged 6–18 years from Nigeria and the UK, when clinically stable. Age-matched controls were also included in Nigeria to validate the Global Lung Initiative spirometry reference values.ResultsNigerian SCA patients (n=154) had significant reductions in both FEV1 and FVC of ~1 z-score compared with local controls (n=364) and ~0.5 z-scores compared with the UK patients (n=101). Wasting (body mass index z-score1/FVC≥−1.64).ConclusionsThis study showed that chronic respiratory impairment is more severe in children with SCA from West Africa than Europe. Our findings suggest the utility of implementing respiratory assessment in African children with SCA to early identify those with chronic lung injury, eligible for closer follow-up and more aggressive therapies.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f9c7ea606f1fa2bb7e4c14273a8e4105