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Fetal hemoglobin level and stroke risk in children with sickle cell anemia

Authors :
Nicolau, Marta
Vargas, Sofia
Coelho, Andreia
Silva, Marisa
Mendonça, Joana
Vieira, Luís
Kjollerstrom, Paula
Maia, Raquel
Silva, Rute
Dias, Alexandra
Ferreira, Teresa
Morais, Anabela
Mota Soares, Isabel
Lavinha, João
Faustino, Paula
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

21ª Reunião da Sociedade Portuguesa de Genética Humana, 16-18 nov 2017 Sickle Cell Anemia (SCA) is a hereditary anemia caused by a missense mutation in HBB and it is characterized by chronic hemolysis, recurrent episodes of vaso-occlusion and infection. Cerebral vasculopathy is one of the most devastating complications of the disease and even young children with SCA have a high risk of stroke. It is known that both environmental and genetic determinants are able to modulate the onset, course and outcome of the disease. Among those, the level of fetal hemoglobin (HbF) has been proposed as the most significant disease modulator. Thus, in this work, we aimed to investigate if the level of HbF in SCA children is related with the risk of stroke and if it is modulated by variants in genes, such as HBG2, BCL11A, HBS1L-MYB, and KLF1. Sixty-seven children (3 years of age) with SCA were enrolled in this study. Hematological and imaging data were retrospectively obtained from patients’ medical records at Greater Lisbon area hospitals. Patients were grouped according to their degree of cerebral vasculopathy evaluated by transcranial Doppler velocities and magnetic resonance imaging. Molecular analyses were performed using Next-Generation Sequencing, Sanger sequencing and PCR-RFLP. In silico studies and statistical analyses were done using the PolyPhen-2 and SPSS softwares, respectively. The association studies revealed that low HbF levels were associated with stroke events in SCA children (p=0.005). At the molecular level, it was observed that patients with the rarest genotypes in HBG2 (rs7482144_TT+TC) presented higher levels of HbF (p=0.031). Additionally, the rs11886868_C and the rs4671393_A alleles in BCL11A also seemed to predispose to higher HbF levels. Moreover, eleven distinct variants in KLF1 were detected (one of them novel, the p.Q342H) with 83% of the patients having at least one variant in this gene. The group of patients who have co-inherited the above mentioned variants in HBG2 and BCL11A together with at least one KLF1 variant presented the highest HbF levels (p=0.021). Our results corroborate previous studies suggesting that a low level of HbF in SCA patients is a risk factor for stroke. Furthermore, we report for the first time the importance of KLF1 variants in combination with other genetic modifiers to the final phenotypic expression of HbF in SCA children with different degrees of cerebral vasculopathy. Consequently, this study allowed the delineation of a genetic pattern with prognostic value for SCA. info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.od......2016..9f8899ab22322264d9d99df347f93ca3