The life expectancy of thalassemic patients has increased, and now approaches that of healthy individuals, thanks to improved treatment regimens. However, pregnancy in women with β-Thalassemia Μajor remains a challenging condition. Recent advances in managing this haemoglobinopathy offer the potential for safe pregnancies with favorable outcome. However, clinical data regarding the use of chelation therapy during pregnancy are limited, and it is unclear whether these agents impose any risk to the developing fetus. Successful pregnancies following unintentional treatment with deferoxamine or deferasirox have rarely been reported. Generally, chelators are not recommended during pregnancy. Regarding the new oral chelators, data on fetotoxicity are lacking. In the present study, we describe the evolution and successful outcome of nine pregnancies in six Greek thalassemic women who received deferasirox inadvertently during early pregnancy, and review the literature regarding fetal anomalies due to chelators. Use of chelation before embarking upon a non-programmed pregnancy remains a difficult and unresolved question. In our study, chelation treatment during pregnancy did not prevent the delivery of healthy children. Nonetheless, the use of deferasirox is contraindicated in pregnant women, based on the product label. Deferasirox should only be used during pregnancy if the potential benefit outweighs the potential fetal risk.
Sickle cell/β
+ thalassemia (Hb S/β
+thal) is considered as a variant form of sickle cell disease. Acute episodes of vasoocclusive pain crisis are characteristic for sickle cell disorders and may be complicated by an acute or chronic life-threatening organ dysfunction. Chronic intrahepatic cholestasis is a rare and severe complication in sickle cell disease, characterized by marked hyperbilirubinemia and acute hepatic failure with an often fatal course. Despite the fact that patients with Hb S/β
+thal usually have a mild type of disease, herein we describe an interesting case of chronic intrahepatic cholestasis with successful outcome in an adult patient with Hb S/β
+thal.
The report of Janus Kinase 2 (JAK2) mutations in myeloid malignancies with high frequency in myeloproliferative neoplasms has been well known since 2005. By monitoring allele burden, it is found that the expression of JAK2V617F mutation is increasing significantly from essential thrombocytosis to polycythemia vera. Furthermore, JAK2 abnormalities are reported in the majority of unexplained thrombotic episodes. Thalassemic syndromes are characterized by ineffective erythropoiesis and thrombocytosis, mainly due to splenectomy. The high incidence of thromboembolic events has led to the identification of a prothrombotic state in these patients. The contribution of JAK2 mutations to the hypercoagulable state of thalassemic patients is still unknown. Furthermore, the potential role of Janus Kinase mutations in hepcidin expression and consequently in ineffective erythropoiesis is still under investigation. This study was scheduled to determine whether the presence of JAK2V617F mutation in thalassemic patients is associated with thrombocytosis. We studied 20 patients DNA with beta-thalassemia for JAK2V617F mutation by using RG-PCR method. None of the patients were positive for this particular mutation. More studies are needed to prove the role of JAK2 in ineffective erythropoiesis, iron metabolism and thrombocytosis and to determine if using JAK2 inhibitors in thalassemic patients can be a potential therapeutic option.
Over the last two decades umbilical cord blood (UCB) transplantation (UCBT) is increasingly used for a variety of malignant and benign hematological and other diseases. The main factor that limits the use of UCB to low weight recipients, mainly children and adolescents, is its low progenitor cell content. Various alternatives have been exploited to overcome this difficulty, including the transplantation of two UCB units (double umbilical cord blood transplantation, dUCBT). Following dUCBT, donor(s) hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) can be detected in the peripheral blood of the recipient as soon as 14 days post-transplantation. Sustained engraftment of HSC from one or both donors can be observed- dominance or mixed chimerism respectively, although single donor unit dominance has been observed in over 85% of patients. The underlying biology, which accounts for the interactions both between the two infused UCB units- cooperative or competitive, and with the recipient’s immune system, has not been elucidated.
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