Genetic and clinical features of hemoglobin H disease in Chinese patients
- PMID: 10954762
- DOI: 10.1056/NEJM200008243430804
Genetic and clinical features of hemoglobin H disease in Chinese patients
Abstract
Background: Normally, one pair of each of the two alpha-globin genes, alpha1 and alpha2, resides on each copy of chromosome 16. In hemoglobin H disease, three of these four alpha-globin genes are affected by a deletion, a mutation, or both. We studied the alpha1-globin gene abnormalities and the clinical and hematologic features of Chinese patients with hemoglobin H disease in Hong Kong.
Methods: We assessed the clinical features, hematologic values, serum ferritin levels, and liver function of 114 patients with hemoglobin H disease. We also performed echocardiography and magnetic resonance imaging of the liver and examined the two pairs of alpha-globin genes.
Results: Hemoglobin H disease in 87 of the 114 patients (76 percent) was due to the deletion of three of the four alpha-globin genes (--/-alpha), a combination termed the deletional type of hemoglobin H. The remaining 27 patients (24 percent) had the nondeletional type of hemoglobin H disease, in which two alpha-globin genes are deleted and a third is mutated (--/alphaalphaT). All 87 patients with the deletional type of hemoglobin H were double heterozygotes in whom there was a deletion of both alpha-globin genes from one chromosome, plus a deletion of the alpha1 or alpha2 gene from the other chromosome (--/alpha- or --/-alpha). A variety of mutated alpha-globin genes was found in the patients with nondeletional type of hemoglobin H disease. Patients with the nondeletional type of the H disease had more symptoms at a younger age, more severe hemolytic anemia, and larger spleens and were more likely to require transfusions than patients with deletional hemoglobin H disease. The severity of iron overload was not related to the genotype.
Conclusions: Chinese patients in Hong Kong with the nondeletional type of hemoglobin H disease have more severe disease than those with the deletional type of the disease. Iron overload is a major cause of disability in both forms of the disease.
Comment in
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Hepatic iron concentration and total body iron stores in thalassemia major.N Engl J Med. 2000 Nov 30;343(22):1656; author reply 1657. doi: 10.1056/NEJM200011303432216. N Engl J Med. 2000. PMID: 11184988 No abstract available.
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Benign Cardiac Effects of Hemoglobin H Disease.Acta Haematol. 2016;135(4):200-7. doi: 10.1159/000442193. Epub 2016 Jan 28. Acta Haematol. 2016. PMID: 26820393
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