Rare Diseases Symptoms Automatic Extraction

The correlation of α-globin gene mutations and the XmnI polymorphism with clinical severity of Hb E/β-thalassemia.

[alpha-thalassemia]

Clinical severity assessment and molecular analysis of β-, α-globin genes and the -158 (C>T) XmnI polymorphism of the (G)γ-globin gene were performed in 80 pediatric patients with Hb E (HBB: c.79G>A)/β-thalassemia (β-thal) to investigate the effects of coinheritance of α-thalassemia (α-thal) and other molecular determinants on their clinical severity. The mean age was 9.4±5.1 years. By using clinical severity score, 35 (43.8%), 27 (33.8%) and 18 cases (22.5%) had moderate, mild and severe disease, respectively. Nine β-thal mutations were identified. All were β(0) or severe β(+) mutations. Five patients (6.3%) had coinherited α(0)-thal. All five patients had mild disease with baseline hemoglobin (Hb) values of 7.9±1.5g/dL, mild hepatosplenomegaly and close-to-normal growth. Only one required a red blood cell transfusion. The disease severity was significantly different among the groups with and without α-thal (p=0.025), but was not different among the groups with or without the XmnI polymorphism (p=0.071). This study demonstrates that coinheritance of α(0)-thal alleviates the degree of disease severity in Hb E/β-thal. All our patients with coinherited α(0)-thal have mild disease.

Diseases presenting "severe β" symptom

  • alpha-thalassemia

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