Genetic Modifiers of Sickle Cell Disease: A Genotype-Phenotype Relationship Study in a Cohort of 82 Children on Mayotte Island
2015
AbstractSickle cell disease presents a great clinical variability that remains largely misunderstood. New disease protective genetic modifiers acting mainly through an increased Hb F level have recently been described. We studied relations between clinical and hematological phenotypes and known sickle cell disease genetic modifiers in patients from Mayotte Island, a remote French territory located in the Indian Ocean. Eighty-two children with sickle cell disease were enrolled; their median age was 5.9 years (range 1-18). Clinical and hematological features of sickle cell disease were retrospectively collected. Genetic studies included determination of β-globin genotypes [Hb SS, Hb S-β0-thalassemia (Hb S-β0-thal), Hb S-β+-thal], βS-globin locus haplotype, α-thalassemia (α-thal), and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located in quantitative trait loci for Hb F expression (XmnI polymorphism, BCL11A rs4671393 and rs11886868, intergenic region of HBS1L-MYB rs28384513, rs4895441 and rs9399137). Univariate ...
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