Nocturnal oxyhemoglobin desaturation and arteriopathy in a pediatric sickle cell disease cohort

2017 
Objective: The purpose of this study of sickle cell disease (SCD) was to determine whether arteriopathy, measurable as intracranial vessel signal loss on magnetic resonance angiography (MRA), was associated with low nocturnal hemoglobin oxygen saturation (SpO 2 ) or hemolytic rate, measurable as reticulocytosis or unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia. Methods: Ninety-five East London children with SCD without prior stroke had overnight pulse oximetry, of whom 47 (26 boys, 39 hemoglobin SS; mean age 9.1 ± 3.1 years) also had MRA, transcranial Doppler (TCD), steady-state hemoglobin, and reticulocytes within 34 months. Two radiologists blinded to the other data graded arteriopathy on MRA as 0 (none) or as increasing severity grades 1, 2, or 3. Results: Grades 2 or 3 arteriopathy (n = 24; 2 with abnormal TCD) predicted stroke/TIA compared with grades 0 and 1 (log-rank χ 2 [1, n = 47] = 8.1, p = 0.004). Mean overnight SpO 2 correlated negatively with reticulocyte percentage ( r = −0.387; p = 0.007). Despite no significant differences across the degrees of arteriopathy in genotype, mean overnight SpO 2 was higher ( p p 2 (odds ratio 0.50, 95% confidence interval 0.26–0.96; p p = 0.003). Conclusion: Low nocturnal SpO 2 and reticulocytosis are associated with intracranial arteriopathy in children with SCD. Preventative strategies might reduce stroke risk.
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