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Abstract
This review addresses several areas of concern in the care of patients with sickle cell disease. In Sections I and II, the fundamental pathogenetic mechanisms of sickle cell disease and their clinical consequences are discussed. Dr. Narla presents the evidence for abnormal cell adhesiveness by SS cells and Dr. Rosse examines the role of the increased whole blood viscosity. In Section III, Dr. Petz reviews common and uncommon alloimmune consequences of transfusion in sickle cell disease and discusses the diagnosis and management of sickle cell patients with hyperhemolysis after transfusion. In Section IV, Dr. Steinberg gives an update on the use of hydroxyurea in the treatment of sickle cell disease, including the SC and S-ß thalassemia variants.
I. Sickle Cell Adhesion
Mohandas Narla, D.Sc.*
An important pathophysiologic feature of sickle cell disease is episodic occurrence of vasoocclusive events that precipitate acute painful episodes. Vasoocclusion of small and sometimes large vessels is the hallmark of sickle cell disease, accounting for much of its morbidity and mortality. Decades of research on sickle hemoglobin polymerization have culminated in elegant elucidations of the contributions of polymerization-dependent processes to various pathophysiologic manifestations of the sickle cell disease. However, it is reasonable to surmise that hemoglobin polymerization in and of itself is not sufficient to account for the episodic nature of vascular occlusion.
Based upon studies from a number of laboratories, there is emerging consensus that a key contributor to vasoocclusion may be the increased tendency of sickle red cells to adhere to vascular endothelium.1,2 Vasoocclusion can occur when transit time of red cells through the capillaries is longer than the delay time for deoxygenation-induced hemoglobin polymerization of sickle hemoglobin. As adherence of sickle red cells to vascular endothelium will impede blood flow and thereby increase capillary transit time, it has been suggested that increased cell adherence can initiate and propagate vasoocclusion.
Factors such as inflammatory mediators that activate endothelial cells and
thereby enhance endothelial adhesivity of sickle red cells thus have the
potential to trigger vasoocclusive episodes. A partial list of agonists that
may alter endothelium and play a role in sickle cell disease includes
TNF-
, interferon-
, IL-1ß, vascular endothelial growth
factor (VEGF), thrombin, and histamine, and the effects of hypoxia and
reperfusion.
Seminal studies by Hebbel two decades ago demonstrated that sickle red
cells exhibit increased adherence to endothelial cells in vitro and that the
extent of in vitro sickle cell adhesivity correlated with vasoocclusive
severity.3 Mohandas
and Evans showed that both red cell membrane changes and plasma factors
account for increased sickle cell adherence to endothelial cells in
vitro.4
Subsequently, a number of studies have defined adhesion pathways involved in
sickle cell adherence to cultured endothelial cells under static and flow
conditions.5,6,7,8,9,10
Adhesive ligands identified on sickle red cells include CD36,
4ß1 integrin, sulfated glycolipid and the
Lutheran blood group antigen. On the endothelial side, cytokine-induced
VCAM-1, a ligand for
4ß1, and
vß3 integrin that binds von Willebrand
factor (vWf) and thrombospondin (TSP) have been shown to mediate sickle cell
adherence. Other potential adhesive receptors on endothelial cells include
GPIb and CD36. The adhesive proteins in plasma, TSP released by platelets, and
vWF released by endothelial cells mediate adhesion by serving as bridging
molecules between adhesive receptors on red cells and endothelial cells.
Sickle red cell interaction with the vessel wall may also involve interaction
with subendothelial matrix components such as laminin, TSP, vWf or fibronectin
exposed by vascular injury. The Lutheran blood group antigen has been shown to
be a major laminin receptor on red cells, while a sulfated glycolipid has been
shown to bind to laminin and to TSP. Based on data from these extensive series
of in vitro studies it is reasonable to conclude that sickle red cells indeed
exhibit an increased adhesive phenotype and that a large number of cell
adhesion receptors, plasma proteins and subendothelial matrix components are
involved in mediating adhesive interactions.
The critical question that has not yet been adequately addressed is the
extent to which the in vitro documented adhesive phenotype of sickle red cells
contributes to vasoocclusion in vivo. While there are no easy experimental
strategies to address these problems, some progress is being made through
physiological studies using animal models. Intravital microscopy has been
employed to study sickle red cell interaction with vessel wall using rat
mesocecum ex vivo perfused with human sickle cells and in transgenic mice that
express high levels of human sickle
hemoglobin.11,12,13
The ex vivo rat studies showed that deformable low-density sickle red cells
are more likely to adhere than undeformable dense sickle cells and that
adhesion was limited to postcapillary venules. A recent study using the same
ex vivo rat model has convincingly demonstrated that treatment with the
vß3-blocking antibody largely abolished
platelet-activating factor-stimulated sickle red cell adhesion to vessel
wall.14 These types
of in vivo studies are beginning to provide support to the thesis that
increased sickle cell adherence could have significant effects on flow
dynamics in the microvasculature and that anti-adhesive therapy may have
clinical benefits.
There are, however, a number of significant issues regarding the in vivo role of sickle cell adherence that cannot be addressed using ex vivo animal models. A major hurdle for progress has been the lack of a suitable animal model for sickle cell disease. The recent development of transgenic/knockout sickle mice that express exclusively human sickle hemoglobin and exhibit many clinical features of human disease15 is likely to prove to be a valuable tool to begin to critically evaluate the role of cell adherence in vasoocclusion and the potential clinical benefit of anti-adhesive therapeutic strategies. While much work still remains to be done, with the recent exciting breakthroughs in our understanding of cell adhesion it is likely that anti-adhesion therapies may become viable treatment options for management of vasoocclusive crisis during the coming decade.
II. Blood Viscosity in Sickle Cell Disease
Wendell F. Rosse, M.D.*
Clearly, the symptoms and major effects of sickle cell disease result from the non-delivery of oxygen by abnormal blood. Much emphasis has been placed on the role of vasoocclusion (see Section I). On the other hand, oxygen delivery may be impaired because of increased blood viscosity without primary adhesion and occlusion as envisioned in the model that has been outlined. This section will focus on the role of whole blood viscosity in the pathophysiology of sickle cell disease.
The viscosity of a fluid is defined as the resistance to flow of that fluid and is determined by a number of factors, including temperature and the intrinsic properties of the fluid. In simple, so-called Newtonian fluids, viscosity is not dependent on the shear rate applied to the fluid. Blood differs in that the viscosity decreases with increasing shear rate. Flow of a viscous fluid through an orifice or pipe is dependent upon the viscosity of the fluid, the force applied to the fluid, and the diameter of the orifice; all of these are important in analyzing the role of whole blood viscosity on the delivery of oxygen.
Blood consists of a suspension of particulate cells in a fluid phase. Whereas the fluid plasma can be analyzed in the Newtonian equations, the addition of particles which themselves have differences in internal and membrane viscosity renders a priori analysis difficult at best. Nevertheless, the viscosity of the elements of blood and the viscosity of the whole blood suspension can be analyzed and related to the clinical effects on blood flow in normal and abnormal clinical states, particularly sickle cell disease.
The Viscosity of Individual Red Cells
The red cells in sickle cell disease have been studied in a number of ways
in order to define the intrinsic characteristics that are altered in sickle
cell
disease.16,17,18
These studies all indicate that the membrane viscosity and deformability in
sickle cell disease is markedly altered even when the cell is fully
oxygenated. Greater forces are required to cause deformation of the membrane
and the internal viscosity of the red cells is increased even at resting
steady state and is markedly increased when the hemoglobin is
deoxygenated.19,20,21,22
This is easy to understand since the molecules of hemoglobin are no longer
randomly arranged when this occurs but rather form structured, elongated
arrays. The increase in viscosity is greater when deoxygenation is sudden and
rapid than when it is
gradual.23 These
studies can provide a basis for estimating the effects of hemoglobin
concentration and composition in various clinical states.
The increased erythrocytic intracellular and membrane viscosity translates directly into increased whole blood viscosity. In studies comparing sickle cell and normal blood at the same hematocrit, the measured viscosity of the oxygenated sickle blood was 1.5-fold that of normal at equal shear rates16 but was increased to 10-fold that of normal blood on deoxygenation. The viscosity decreased linearly as the proportion of HbSS cells was reduced by mixing, but the increase in viscosity remained significant even at levels of 25% HbS.24
The Role of Hematocrit
While the internal viscosity of the red cells is of great importance in
determining the flow characteristics of the blood, a major determinant of
whole blood viscosity is the hematocrit of the blood. For normal blood, the
viscosity rises linearly as the hematocrit is increased. At very high
hematocrits, the viscosity may rise at a greater rate than the rate of rise of
the hematocrit, although this is questioned. More importantly, the delivery of
oxygen began to decrease above hematocrits of 45-50% and is dramatically
decreased at a hematocrit of 60%. This decrease reflects the diminished
circulation in small vessels as the whole blood viscosity rises.
The effect of hematocrit is even more striking when blood containing HbS is examined. At full oxygen saturation, the curve relating viscosity to hematocrit was much steeper than for normal; deoxygenation made it steeper still. The curve relating oxygen delivery to hematocrit was strikingly shifted such that, even with full oxygenation, the diminution in oxygen delivery begins at hematocrits of 30-35% and is striking at hematocrits of 45%. When the blood was even minimally deoxygenated, the curve was shifted even further. Diminished oxygen delivery results in tissue hypoxia and further desaturation of the hemoglobin in a vicious cycle.
The Effects of Increased Viscosity
The effects on the circulation due to increased viscosity are seen in
larger vessels than the effects of adherence and occlusion. The rate of flow
through a tube is governed by the diameter of the tube, all other things being
equal. With increased viscosity, the flow is diminished and the diminution
increases as the diameter decreases. In the circulatory system, the critical
diameter is probably at the level of the arterioles since the effects of
increased viscosity appear to be manifest in the hypoxia and consequent
changes in function of tissues supplied by vessels of this caliber. If the
consequent hypoxia is sufficiently prolonged in a sufficiently large volume of
tissue, necrosis results.
A second and important effect of increased whole blood viscosity is the increased tendency to thrombosis, probably due to the slowed rate of circulation. This thrombosis can be seen on either the arterial or venous side of the circulation and has been known for many years in the pathophysiology of polycythemia and macroglobulinemia. These effects are exaggerated in the case of sickle cell disease.
Clinical Complications Made Worse by Increased Viscosity
It is difficult at best to observe the changes to blood flow in vivo in
patients with sickle cell disease. However, the effects of increased viscosity
can be assessed by noting the complications in which high hematocrit is a risk
factor. Since the main effect of an increased hematocrit in sickle cell
disease is a striking increase in blood viscosity, this measure serves as a
surrogate for the effect of increased viscosity in the pathogenesis of the
disease.
Acute complications
Acute Chest Syndrome: The results of the Cooperative Study of
Sickle Cell Disease (CSSCD) demonstrated that, in adults, an increased
hematocrit was a major risk factor in the genesis of the acute chest
syndrome.25 While
the term is somewhat over-inclusive and may encompass pneumonia, fat embolism,
thromboembolism, etc., a major cause or component in most cases is altered
circulation of the blood through the pulmonary circuit. At least part of the
problem may be an inability to de-sickle incoming venous blood; this would
lead to an increase in viscosity, further decreasing the ability of the blood
to circulate. This appears to occur in small patches, which then coalesce into
regions of altered ventilation-perfusion and hypoxia. The areas of the lung
beyond this circulatory obstacle are prone to infection, resulting in
pneumonia. If the area affected is large enough and the hypoxia sufficient,
destruction of the lung occurs. In this scenario, it is easy to see how an
increased hematocrit would be a liability.
Acute Multi-Organ Damage Syndrome: A syndrome in which one or more organs are damaged at the same time has been described particularly in patients with high hematocrit.26 The onset is due to arterial hypoxia, such as may be generated by the acute chest syndrome, but often there is no apparent predisposing event other than sudden syncope. The symptoms are due to insufficient perfusion of one or more organs. The effect on the brain usually results in non-focal coma, and imaging studies may be of little help in elucidating the difficulty; in this respect, the effects resemble those of thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura. Recovery of cerebral function may take several days but is usually complete or nearly so. The kidneys may be affected, manifested by hematuria or acute renal failure. Acute necrosis of the liver or hepatic sequestration syndrome may occur. The bone marrow may be generally affected with necrosis of the marrow and generation of fat emboli. Pancreatitis may occur. These evidences of tissue damage can occur in any combination and may persist for 1-2 weeks.
This syndrome is most common in sickle cell disease and S-ß thalassemia but does occur in patients with classical SS disease and a high hematocrit. The genesis is presumably diminished arterial input due to the increased viscosity of the hypoxic blood. The treatment is the emergent replacement of the blood with blood of lower viscosity
"Watershed" Stroke: Cerebrovascular events can occur in several forms in sickle cell disease. One type appears to be a special case of the events noted in the multi-organ damage syndrome, in which the circulation to an area of the central nervous system is impaired sufficiently to cause necrosis. The obstruction to flow occurs in the terminal branches of the circulatory system; hence, the resultant defects are not as global as those cause by occlusion of major vessels. The area affected can usually be demonstrated by careful imaging, especially with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Chronic complications
Pain: All pain and pain episodes in sickle cell disease are not
the same. The classic "vasoocclusive crisis," due presumably to
the adhesion of erythrocytes to the endothelium with consequent occlusion of
the microcirculation beyond, is usually sudden in onset, lasts 5-10 days
followed by a gradual offset, and is then over until the next episode occurs.
It is marked by the generation of products of coagulation (D-dimer,
prothrombin fragments, cross-linked fibrin monomer, etc.), perhaps
consequences of events stabilizing the occluding barrier. In patients with
homozygous sickle cell disease, three factors correlate with the frequency and
onset of such events: infections (which may alter the characteristics of the
plasma), leukocytosis (which may slow flow in the microcirculation,
particularly during infection), and increased hematocrit; the latter effect
is, however, minor.
Some patients with syndromes of sickle cell disease characterized by higher hematocrits (sickle cell disease, S-ß thalassemia, etc.) have fewer typical vasoocclusive crises but may have pain that is more transient, not as severe, and not accompanied by evidence of coagulation. In some, there may be subcutaneous edema and great tenderness of the subcutaneous tissues, due perhaps to diminished oxygen delivery to these areas. These patients are often quite incapacitated by the frequency of the pain and are likely to become frequent users of pain medications. Because they have supposedly milder forms of sickle cell disease, their symptoms are sometimes ignored. This type of pain is presumably due to the effects of increased viscosity, which leads to reduced oxygen delivery and subsequent hypoxia. In some patients, reduction in the hematocrit may lead to improvement in the discomfort.
Aseptic Necrosis of Bone: The aseptic necrosis of the proximal
epiphyseal segments of the humeri and especially the femora is a relatively
common event in sickle cell
disease27 and is
more common in patients with HbSS and
thalassemia or in patients with
S-ß thalassemia. The pathogenesis is not entirely clear but is probably
related to the fact that these structures are essentially enclosed spaces with
a single incoming artery and outgoing vein. One suggested scenario posits that
the increased viscosity of blood retards the venous outflow, resulting in an
increase in the tissue pressure within the enclosed space. This pressure then
begins to reduce arterial input with resultant hypoxia of the marrow and
bone.
Ocular Complications: Decreased circulation to the retina results in a series of defects related to hypoxia, including so-called "salmon spots," retinal degeneration, and neovascularization said to resemble a sea fan. These are presumably due to difficulties in circulation through arterioles of the size that can be observed on the retina. While these findings are common enough in SS disease, their incidence is related to an elevation of the hematocrit and whole blood viscosity28 and they are common in sickle cell and S-ß thalassemia. If the retinal vessels are a reflection of what happens in other small-sized vessels, such changes may be more general than is usually appreciated.
Hypertransfusion syndrome
When the hematocrit is elevated too rapidly or too high in the course of
transfusion, several complications may result, including heart failure from
cardiac overload. In addition, some of the syndromes listed above may come
from the increase in viscosity because of the increase in hematocrit; the most
common of these complications is a stroke. Even though the blood being
transfused will contribute less to the viscosity than the circulating blood,
the increase in hematocrit may be sufficient to increase the viscosity to
dangerous levels.
Implications for Therapy
If hyperviscosity is playing an important role in the pathogenesis of an
acute complication of sickle cell disease, then therapy should be directed at
the rapid reduction of it. This is best done by exchange transfusion, using a
mechanical device to remove and replace the patient's blood. The objective
should be a reduction in hematocrit to less than 30% and a proportion of
transfused blood greater than 80%. These values can be obtained by using
calculations based on the blood volume (estimated from the patient's body
weight), initial hematocrit, initial proportion of HbS, final hematocrit, and
final desired proportion of HbS. If the initial hematocrit is above 35%, it
may be useful to remove a unit or two of the patient's blood before the
calculation is done.
In treating the acute chest syndrome, exchange transfusion should be undertaken if there are signs of increasing infiltrate on chest X-ray, if the arterial pO2 cannot be maintained above 70 torr, or if the patient is experiencing oxygen hunger manifest by dyspnea or tachypnea. When this regimen has been followed at Duke, we have had only two deaths in 32 patients with serious acute chest syndrome.
In treating the acute multi-organ damage syndrome, exchange transfusion should be undertaken as soon as possible to prevent damage from being permanent. Supportive care should be continued as long as possible since many patients who appear moribund recover completely or nearly so with sufficient time.
The role of exchange transfusion is not so clear in the "watershed stroke" syndrome, but there is reason to believe that its prompt institution would be beneficial.
The chronic suppression of hyperviscosity is much more difficult. None of the many drugs that have been tried in an effort to reduce hyperviscosity pharmacologically are useful. Reduction of the hematocrit by phlebotomy can be useful; we have tried this on a series of 11 patients with high hematocrit syndromes with reported benefit. This reduction is difficult to maintain and venous access is frequently a problem. At present, there is no pharmacological agent that selectively reduces erythrocyte production; one is needed.
Considerations of the effect of high hematocrit in causing effects from hyperviscosity also come into play when testing drugs directed at the amelioration of sickle cell disease. Drugs that ameliorate the disease will usually elevate the hematocrit. Care must be take to be sure that this effect does not outweigh the beneficial effect of the drug in countering the sickling process.
III. Hemolytic Transfusion Reactions in Patients with Sickle Cell Anemia
Lawrence D. Petz, M.D.*
Hemolytic transfusion reactions (HTRs) are of particular concern in patients with sickle cell disease. In addition to the usual laboratory manifestations of hemolysis, patients with sickle cell disease may develop serious and even life-threatening problems. These HTRs may present with a number of distinctive features that form part of a constellation of findings we have termed the Sickle Cell HTR syndrome.29
Components of the Sickle Cell Hemolytic Transfusion Reaction
Syndrome
Comments Regarding the Components of the Sickle Cell Hemolytic
Transfusion Reaction Syndrome
The development or intensification of symptoms suggestive of a sickle
cell pain crisis.
Patients who experience brisk hemolysis often develop generalized malaise,
back pain, flank pain, chest pain and fever and, in a patient with sickle cell
disease, these findings may be interpreted by the patient and/or the attending
physician as being caused by a sickle cell pain crisis. It is not always clear
whether the pain symptoms are simply part of the HTR and misinterpreted as a
sickle cell pain crisis or whether the hemolysis initiates a true pain crisis.
The critical point to keep in mind is that the diagnosis of a HTR may go
unrecognized because of the tendency to attribute all signs and symptoms in an
acutely ill patient with sickle cell disease to a diagnosis of pain
crisis.30,31,32
The delay in making a diagnosis of a HTR contributes significantly to
morbidity and to the probability of mortality.
Reticulocytopenia
Another frequent finding in the sickle cell HTR syndrome is
reticulocytopenia, which we have defined as a significant decrease in the
absolute reticulocyte level compared to the patient's usual value.
Reticulocytosis is a critical mechanism by which patients with sickle cell
disease partially compensate for their shortened red cell survival. If
erythropoiesis is suppressed in patients with a very short RBC survival, a
rapid increase in the severity of the anemia will occur. Accordingly, if a
patient with sickle cell disease has a severe HTR in which transfused RBC are
hemolyzed rapidly and, in addition, the patient's reticulocyte level is
significantly depressed, severe and life-threatening anemia may develop.
The development of more severe anemia than was present prior to
transfusion
One of the most important findings in the sickle cell HTR syndrome is the
development of more severe anemia than was present prior to transfusion, as
has been indicated in a number of
reports.29,31.33.34
This presents a therapeutic dilemma since a patient with severe anemia may
seem to require transfusion, yet the anemia may become progressively more
severe after each
transfusion.29,31,35
The following case report illustrates this
point.29
A 28-year-old woman with sickle cell anemia was hospitalized with chest, knee, and back pain, diarrhea and an ankle ulcer. Her hematocrit (Hct) on Day 2 was 13.2%. She was transfused with 3 units of RBCs over the next 5 days, after which her Hct rose to 24.7%. However, signs of a delayed hemolytic transfusion reaction (DHTR) developed, and on Day 9, she received three additional units of RBCs. On Day 12, after having received a total of 6 units of RBC, her hematocrit had fallen to 11%. During the next three days, she received an additional 9 units of RBC but, after a temporary rise, her Hct dropped further to a level of 9.3% on Day 17. Thus, after the transfusion of a total of 15 units of RBC, her hematocrit had gone from 13 to 9.3%! It should be noted that during the first hemolytic episode her reticulocytes dropped to a nadir of 4.5% and, during the second episode, to 2.8%.
Prednisone (60 mg/day) was begun on Day 15 and two more units of RBCs were transfused on Day 17. Subsequently, signs of hemolysis decreased and the Hct progressively increased. Twenty-seven months later she manifested similar findings after transfusion.
Serologic Findings
The sickle cell HTR syndrome most often occurs in patients who have
multiple RBC alloantibodies, at times in association with autoantibodies. In
some patients, a newly detected RBC alloantibody develops following
transfusion as is typical in a DHTR, whereas in other patients the serologic
findings do not provide an explanation for the hemolysis. This may be because
no new antibodies become apparent during the DHTR or, in some instances,
because there are no alloantibodies or autoantibodies demonstrable at any
time.
A classic case was reported by Chaplin and Cassell,36 who described, in remarkable detail, a patient with sickle cell disease in whom rapid destruction of transfused red cells occurred repeatedly despite entirely compatible crossmatch results by a wide variety of serologic methods. Overt hemolysis occurred even after the transfusion of crossmatch-compatible RBCs from two siblings whose blood types were identical to the patient's with respect to numerous RBC antigens. These authors were the first to point out the regular onset of typical sickle pain "crisis" coincident with the rapid destruction of large volumes of donor erythrocytes.
Diamond et al30 and Cullis et al32 also described patients who had clinical and laboratory findings of a delayed HTR, although the direct antiglobulin test (DAT) and antibody screen remained negative.
Although DHTRs in sickle cell patients have been reported in which serologic findings do not explain the hemolysis, one must not think of this phenomenon as unique to sickle cell patients. Cases of DHTR have been described in patients without sickle cell disease in which the DAT remained persistently negative and no new alloantibodies were detected in the serum37,38
Management
The most difficult aspect of management is the question of transfusing a
patient who has had a HTR following which the anemia has become more severe
than it was prior to transfusion. Subsequent transfusions may further
exacerbate the anemia and it may become life-threatening or even
fatal.31,35
Transfusion may be absolutely necessary in some patients but, if practical,
withholding transfusion and treating with corticosteroids, possibly in
association with IVIG and large doses of erythropoietin, is often preferable.
Very close observation of severely anemic patients is required to make such
judgments appropriately.
Possible Mechanisms of Development of More Severe Anemia Following
Transfusion
Progressively more severe anemia following transfusion could be due to
hemolysis of donor RBCs coupled with suppression of erythropoiesis.
Alternatively, extreme posttransfusion anemia could be due to an immune
reaction that causes in increased rate of hemolysis (hyperhemolysis) of the
recipient's own RBCs. This would be an example of a type of hemolytic reaction
that has been termed "bystander immune
cytolysis."29,39
Suppression of erythropoiesis
When patients with sickle cell anemia develop suppression of
erythropoiesis, as may be caused by infection, a marked drop in Hct is to be
expected because of the short survival of the patients' RBCs. Such an abrupt
drop in hemoglobin and hematocrit may be mistaken for hyperhemolysis. Indeed,
transfusion itself suppresses erythropoiesis, as has been well documented in
patients with sickle cell disease by Donegan et
al.40 Therefore,
when there is an unexpectedly low Hct after transfusion, it is important to
calculate the magnitude of the drop that can be explained on the basis of
suppression of erythropoiesis, so as to not inappropriately interpret the drop
in Hct as indicating hyperhemolysis.
The magnitude of a drop in Hct that can be explained on the basis of depressed erythropoiesis may be determined from the expected loss of RBC volume through senescence and the residual RBC production as indicated by hematologic data including reticulocyte counts incorporating known correction factors for reticulocyte maturation. We performed such calculations in a series of sickle cell patients,29 and the findings in one such patient are as follows:
A 22-year-old man with sickle cell anemia was admitted with severe back pain, productive cough, dyspnea, fever and purulent sputum. The Hct on admission was 25.9% and over the next seven days it dropped to 13.9%. The patient had no evidence of bleeding and he was not transfused during this period. Of particular note is that the uncorrected reticulocyte count dropped from 18.1% to 3.2% during this time. Using a figure of 69 ml/kg for blood volume,41 the patients weight of 66 kg, and the patient's hematocrit, we estimated the patient's RBC volume on admission as 1,179 mL. Using hematologic data on admission as an estimate of steady state conditions, we calculated that RBC production and destruction would be 107 mL per day. Over a 7-day period 749 mL of RBC would have reached the end of their life span. If RBC production had ceased, there would have been a loss of 749 mL, leaving a RBC volume of 430 mL. In this case, the patient's hematocrit would have been only 9.3%. Actually, the patient's hematocrit on day 7 was 13.9%, indicating that RBC production had not ceased entirely. Most significantly, the calculations indicate that suppressed erythropoiesis in this patient with sickle cell disease could readily account for the alarming fall in Hct from 25.9 to 13.9% over a 7 days.
Bystander immune hemolysis.
Bystander immune cytolysis (BIC) may be the mechanism by which the
patient's own RBC are hemolyzed during a HTR. BIC may be defined as immune
cytolysis caused by an alloantigen-induced immune response leading to lysis of
cells that do not contain the antigen as an intrinsic part of their membrane.
BIC has been reported to occur in a number of clinical
settings,39
including the passenger lymphocyte syndrome following minor ABO incompatible
marrow
transplants,42,43
severe hemolytic transfusion
reactions,30,44
posttransfusion
purpura,45 and
drug-induced immune
hemolysis.39 This
could lead to an increased rate of hemolysis of the patient's RBCs
("hyperhemolysis"), which has been suggested as the mechanism
leading to severe anemia following a HTR in sickle cell anemia patients by a
number of
investigators.32,33,34,35,46,47
A number of possible mechanisms have been suggested as explanations for the pathogenesis of BIC.39 One proposed mechanism is reactive hemolysis that is caused by activated complement components that are formed because of an antigen-antibody reaction. These activated complement components may then attach to RBCs not involved in the original immune reaction, resulting in their lysis.48,49,50 Both Salama and Mueller-Eckhardt51 and Ness et al52 have reported that autologous RBCs are sensitized by complement with or without detectable antibody in at least some instances of delayed HTRs, although in neither study was an effort made to determine if autologous RBCs had a shortened survival. Reactive hemolysis seemed a particularly attractive hypothesis regarding patients with sickle cell anemia because their red cells have an increased susceptibility to lysis by complement.53 However, a syndrome similar to the sickle cell HTR syndrome occurs in patients with thalassemia54 and may occur in patients with other causes of hemolytic anemia.55 Another possible mechanism for destruction of autologous RBCs during a HTR is the development or augmentation of RBC autoantibodies as a result of immune modulation resulting from transfusion. Indeed, a number of authors have attributed severe anemia after transfusion of patients with sickle cell anemia to autoantibodies.29,39,46,56,57
In patients with the sickle cell HTR syndrome, it is difficult to develop definitive data on the mechanism of the severe anemia that may develop. Hyperhemolysis of the patient's RBC is an attractive hypothesis and may well provide the explanation or at least be a contributing factor, but data that are more definitive are required to document this intriguing possibility.39
IV. Current Use of Hydroxyurea in Sickle Cell Disease
Martin H. Steinberg, M.D.*
More than 50 years ago Janet Watson recognized that the red cells of
infants with sickle cell trait failed to sickle in vitro as did cells of their
mother's with sickle cell trait and that infants with sickle cell anemia had
few symptoms. She hypothesized that these observations were due to elevated
fetal hemoglobin (HbF) levels in infant blood. HbF interferes with HbS
polymerization and it was appreciated that enough HbFif evenly
distributed among sickle erythrocytesmight "cure" the
sickle cell disease. A search was launched for pharmacological agents that
could reverse the switch from
- to ß-globin chain
synthesis
-globin chains characterize HbF and sickle
ß-globin chains are present in HbSor select adult erythroid
precursors that maintained the ability to produce HbF. The first
"hemoglobin switching" agent, a nucleoside analog 5-azacytidine,
was postulated to increase HbF by inducing gene expression. Other
drugshydroxyurea is the prototypepromote HbF production
indirectly, perturbing the maturation of erythroid precursors.
Mechanisms of Action of HbF-Activating Agents
Methylation and gene expression
Among the DNA alterations postulated to have an important influence upon
gene expression is cytosine methylation and demethylation at CpG
dinucleotides.58
Inducing hypomethylation activates transcription of many tissue-specific
genes.59 Cytosine
methylation may repress
transcription.60 In
fetal tissues, human
-globin genes are
hypomethylated.61
However, hypomethylation does not accompany all expressed genes; whether gene
hypomethylation is a primary cause or secondary effect of gene expression is
unclear. Hypomethylation can be induced by cytidine analogs such as
5-azacytidine.
Selection of HbF-producing erythroid progenitorscytotoxicity
and erythroid regeneration
Adults make small amounts of HbF, restricted to the rare
F-cellerythrocytes with measurable amounts of HbF. Rapid regeneration
or expansion of the erythroid marrow induces F-cell production, suggesting
that the kinetics of erythroid regeneration determine whether a cell will
become an F-cell. Perhaps earlier progenitor cells contain
trans-acting factorsfetal erythroid
Krüppel-like factor is one examplethat
favor
-globin gene expression, while late progenitors express other
trans-acting factors favoring ß-globin gene expression.
Accelerated erythropoiesis increases the chance of premature stem cell
commitment and F-cell production. Many cytotoxic drugs can induce HbF
expression but cannot directly cause gene hypomethylationhydroxyurea is
one exampleproviding strong support for the erythroid regeneration
mechanism of action of HbF
induction.62
Histone deacetylase inhibition
Butyrates appear to directly modulate globin gene expression by binding to
transcriptionally active
elements.63
Accompanying gene expression is an inhibition of histone deacetylase, histone
hyperacetylation, and changes in chromatin structure. Butyrate does not seem
cytotoxic and is unlikely to affect HbF levels by inducing erythroid
regeneration.
Hemoglobin F-Inducing Agents
5-Azacytidine and butyrate
DeSimone and his coworkers inaugurated the clinical study of hemoglobin
"switching" agents. Phlebotomized baboons had a rapid increase in
F-cells with a maximum HbF concentration of 2 to 10%, a result explained by
the brisk regeneration of erythroid precursors. When 5-azacytidine was added,
HbF concentration increased to between 67 and
81%.64 These
observationsdeemed a result of
-globin gene
hypomethylationled to clinical trials of 5-azacytidine in patients with
sickle cell anemia. That 5-azacytidine might stimulate HbF production via
cytotoxicity rather than gene hypomethylation prompted a search for easier to
manage "switching" agents.
In sickle cell anemia, initial trials of butyrate given by continuous
infusion over a 2- to 3-week interval were inconsistent; newer studies using
pulse butyrate treatment are encouraging. When arginine butyrate was given
once or twice monthly, 11 of 15 patients with sickle cell anemia responded
with a mean increase in HbF from 7% to 21%, a level maintained in some
individuals for 1 to 2
years.65 These
studies also suggested no cross-resistance between butyrate and hydroxyurea.
Pretreatment with hydroxyurea may select a population of erythroid precursors
with active
-globin genes and make them responsive to butyrate.
Presently, the use of butyrate remains experimental.
Hydroxyurea in Sickle Cell Anemia
Hydroxyurea arrests DNA synthesis by preventing deoxyribonucleotide
formation from ribonucleoside precursors. In anemic primates hydroxyurea
increased HbF
levels.66 In two
patients with sickle cell anemia, hydroxyurea doses of 50 to 100 mg/kg daily
in three divided doses increased F-reticulocytes and HbF concentrations. Pilot
trials showed increased HbF in treated patients and little short-term
toxicity.67
Clinical and hematologic effects
A pivotal efficacy multicenter trial of hydroxyurea in 299 adults with
sickle cell anemia showed that hydroxyurea reduced by nearly half the
frequency of hospitalizations and the incidence of pain, acute chest syndrome,
and blood
transfusion.68 In
good responders hemolysis and leukocyte counts fell and hemoglobin
concentrations increased. HbF increased from a baseline of 5% to about 9%
after 2 years of
treatment.68 HbF
increased to a mean of 18% in the top 25% of HbF responders and to 9% in the
next highest 25% but changed little in the lower half of HbF
responders.69 These
results may not be typical of all patients since the patients in the study had
a mean age of about 30 years, had severe disease and were treated to the brink
of myelotoxicity.70
Some individuals had improved physical capacity and aerobic cardiovascular
fitness.71 A modest
improvement in general perceptions of health and social function and recall of
pain was found.72
Hydroxyurea was cost effective and clinically
beneficial.73
Studies of hydroxyurea in infants, children and adolescents lag behind
adult studies in the appraisal of clinical
efficacy.74,75,76,77,78
Most reported patients were adolescents or teenagers treated in unblinded
pilot studies, but 25 patients, median age 9 years, were treated in a
single-blinded crossover study with drug or
placebo.77 In all
trials, HbF increased from
5% before treatment to
16% after 6 months
to 1 year of treatment.
A trial in 84 children (mean age,
10 years) gave results similar to
those in adults.79
Sixty-eight patients reached the maximally tolerated dose, and 52 completed 1
year of treatment. About 20% of enrolled patients withdrew from the study,
predominantly because of lack of compliance. Baseline HbF of 6.8% increased to
19.8% (range, 3.2% to 32.4%). hematocrit and hemoglobin concentration
increased and the leukocyte count fell. These changes, apparent after 6 months
of treatment, were sustained at 24
months.80 The
increment in HbF was variable; unlike the adults, patients with the highest
baseline HbF concentration had the highest HbF levels with treatment, and the
decrement in leukocyte count did not predict the HbF increment.
Twenty-nine infants, median age 14 months, were treated with hydroxyurea at a dose of 20 mg/kg for 2 years, escalating to 30 mg/kg thereafter.82 After 2 years, all parents elected to continue treatment and 19 children have completed a median treatment period of 148 weeks. Changes in hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, HbF and leukocyte count were compared with the changes observed in a historical control group. Hemoglobin increased from 8.5 to 8.9 g/dl (predicted, 8.2 g/dl) MCV increased from 82 to 93 fl (predicted, 88 fl), HbF fell from 21.3 to 19.6% (predicted, 12.3%).81 Functional asplenia was found in 24% of patients before treatment and in 47% after treatment (predicted, 80%). Nine patients were dropped from study for poor compliance or parental refusal to continue; one child died of splenic sequestration. One patient had a transient ischemic attack, one a "mild" stroke, eight had episodes of acute chest syndrome, two had splenic sequestration, and three had episodes of sepsis.82 Growth was normal. Despite impressive levels of HbF, acute complications of sickle cell anemia still occurred in these very young patients. Perhaps functional asplenia is delayed by treatment but further work is needed to document this potentially important result.
Mortality and morbidity
The best data on the complications of hydroxyurea treatment and its effect
on morbidity and mortality come from the follow-up of patients in the
multicenter trial. By the conclusion of the randomized trial (mean of 28
months of treatment), two hydroxyurea-assigned and six placebo-assigned
patients had died, a statistically insignificant
difference.83
Mortality was unaffected by age, sex, ß-globin gene haplotype,
-globin genotype, F-cell production locus phenotype, HbF level, and
crisis rate, but this result may be a consequence of the small numbers of
deaths and the selected nature of the patient
population.84,85
After 8 years, five strokes had occurred (three fatal) in patients on
hydroxyurea and three non-fatal strokes were found in patients on a placebo.
New adverse effects have not been found and no patient has developed a
neoplasm. After nearly 8 years of follow-up, pulmonary disease was the most
common cause of death. In other studies, hydroxyurea alone did not reverse
pulmonary hypertension in patients with frequent acute chest episodes although
HbF levels were almost 20%; some patients even had progression of their lung
disease.86
In 278 patients with HbF measurements after randomization and treatment, cumulative mortality at 8 years was 24% when HbF was < 0.5 g/dL compared with 11% when HbF was > 0.5 g/dL (p = 0.02). Patients taking hydroxyurea during any given quarter during 6 to 8 years of follow-up had a lower mortality rate than patients not taking hydroxyurea. In this analysis there was a 40% reduction in mortality over this observation period (p = 0.04).
We do not know whether hydroxyurea will prevent or even reverse organ damage. After 1 year of treatment, splenic function in children (average age 12 years) did not change.78 Of 10 patients with sickle cell anemia who received hydroxyurea for 21 months and had an increase in HbF from 8 to 17%, recovery of splenic function, ascertained by "pit" counts, Howell-Jolly bodies and 99TC-labeled heat-damaged erythrocyte scans, was present in only one. In a prospective study, some patients had partial return of splenic function and this may be related to HbF levels.87 Splenic regeneration was reported in two adults with sickle cell anemia who had HbF levels of about 30% after hydroxyurea treatment.88
Hydroxyurea does not appear to prevent the cerebrovascular complications of sickle cell anemia. However, in children aged 5 to 15 years, without a history of overt CVA and with more than three painful episodes yearly, hydroxyurea maintained their cognitive performance compared with their sibling controls, whereas performance was noted to deteriorate in untreated patients.89
Prediction of response
Presently, predicting whether a patient will respond to hydroxyurea
treatment with an increase in HbF and reduction in vasoocclusive events is not
possible. In the multicenter trial, the best HbF-responding patients had the
highest initial neutrophil and reticulocyte counts and the largest
treatment-associated decrements in these counts. Patients with the greatest
reduction in granulocyte, monocyte, and reticulocyte counts also had the
largest reduction in painful
episodes.70
Individuals with the best HbF response were less likely to have a HbS gene on
a Bantu haplotype
chromosome.70 Among
patients with little change in final HbF level, initial increases in F cells
returned to baseline early during treatment. Perhaps, because of marrow
"scarring," some patients are unable to tolerate continual
myelosuppressive doses of
hydroxyurea.69 In
83 hydroxyurea-treated patients, using 23 different parameters that included
age, treatment duration, blood counts and red cell indices, HbF and
ß-globin gene haplotype, an artificial neural network pattern-recognition
analysis predicted the response to hydroxyurea, defined as an increase in HbF
to 15%, with
85%
accuracy.90
In adults, the ability to respond to hydroxyurea may be dependent upon the capacity of the marrow to withstand moderate doses of hydroxyurea with acceptable myelotoxicity. This may be reflected by the baseline reticulocyte and neutrophil counts. Sustained HbF increases during hydroxyurea treatment can occur when bone marrow "reserve" is sufficient to cope with myelotoxicity and the marrow regenerates with erythroblasts capable of substantial HbF synthesis.
How Does Hydroxyurea Work?
Hydroxyurea may work by multiple mechanisms
(Figure 1). In most
trials, improvement in clinical symptoms mirroredor slightly
precededthe increases in HbF levels. Further studies suggested that the
reduction in neutrophils, monocytes, and reticulocytes might also be
important.70
Neutrophils from patients having a painful episode had increased adherence to
cultured endothelial
cells.91 By
reducing blood neutrophils, hydroxyurea may lessen the chance and severity of
vasoocclusive events. Diminishing the numbers of "stress"
reticulocytes may be therapeutically beneficial as these cells may also
initiate vasoocclusive
complications.92
During treatment, many simultaneous changes occur in the sickle
erythrocyte.93
Indisputably, the increase in HbF is a primary effect of treatment making it
difficult to know if the other myriad effects are primary or secondary. As
expected, with increasing HbF there is a reduced rate and extent of HbS
polymerization. Sickle cell-endothelial cell adherence decreases before a
measured increase in HbF occurs suggesting a direct effect on red cell
membrane or the adhesive properties of endothelial cells. Hydroxyurea may make
endothelial cells a less attractive site for sickle cell
adherence.94 Dense
cell numbers fall as erythrocyte K+ content
increases.91 Two
reticulocyte adhesion receptors,
4ß1
integrin and CD36 also fall early during
hydroxyurea.95
Improved cellular hydration and deformability are likely to be secondary to
increased HbF and may play a role in the reduction of vasoocclusive episodes
and the reduced hemolysis accompanying
treatment.96
|
Several reports suggest a novel method of action. These include generation of nitric oxide (NO) by peroxidation of hydroxyurea, increased erythropoietin production and induction of methemoglobin formation.97,98,99
Hydroxyurea in Other Sickle Hemoglobinopathies
In HbS-ß thalassemia, hydroxyurea appears to work as well as in sickle
cell
anemia.100,101
Pilot studies in adults with HbSC disease indicated that hydroxyurea was
associated with sustained increases in mean cell volume (MCV), a fall in
absolute reticulocyte counts, "stress" reticulocytes and dense red
cells, and a small increase in
hematocrit.102
Only a few individuals had increased HbF. Five children with HbSC disease
(average age, 13.5 years) and an additional six adults were treated with a
median dose of 1000 mg/day of hydroxyurea for 5 to 25 months. Hemoglobin
concentration increased by 1 g/dL, MCV increased from 80 to 94 to 103 fl and
HbF in children increased from 1.9 to
9.9%.103
Hydroxyurea did not increase the maximal urine concentration of children with
HbSC
disease.104
Recommendations for Treating Sickle Cell Anemia with Hydroxyurea
An approach to therapy is outlined in
Table 1. The
availability of 200, 300, and 400 mg hydroxyurea capsules (DroxiaTM)
makes precise dose titration possible. Many different dosing schemes have been
recommended, but the sole controlled study gave drug daily and pushed the dose
just short of
myelotoxicity.105
Experience has suggested that, in most patients, dose escalation to sub-toxic
levels is not needed for a satisfactory therapeutic effect. Since MCV rises
and usually parallels the increase in HbF when hydroxyurea is used, this
inexpensive measurement is a useful surrogate for HbF level that can be
serially followed although HbF should be measured periodically.
|
Indications for hydroxyurea treatment are likely to change as our understanding of its safety and benefits evolve. Several reports suggest hydroxyurea as an alternative to transfusion to prevent new or recurrent stroke, especially when the blood transfusion is not feasible.106,107,108 In 16 children, treatment with hydroxyurea raised HbF to 20% while phlebotomy reduced serum ferritin from 2630 to 636 ng/ml.51 Three new neurological events occurred before HbF was maximized. Other instances of stroke in patients with sickle cell anemia treated with hydroxyurea with "therapeutic" HbF levels have been recorded. HbF levels of 20% do not protect absolutely from other disease events and perhaps stroke is no exception, just a more dramatic example of the shortcomings of a treatment that does not address the entirety of the pathobiology of sickle cell disease. Alternatively, the pathogenesis of cerebral vasculopathy may differ from that of other vasoocclusive complications.
Blood transfusions suppress erythropoiesis, and active erythropoiesis is necessary for hydroxyurea to increase HbF. Although not carefully studied, using hydroxyurea in patients on frequent or regular transfusion programs is probably not efficacious, although some chronically transfused children may have a modest HbF increase when given hydroxyurea.109
Some adult patients will not respond to treatment with an increase in HbF or MCV even when they faithfully take their prescribed medication, although failure to take the medication regularly seems to account for the largest number of "poor responders."69,110,111 True "non-responders" may number between 10 and 20% of treated patients and be dependent on the dosing regimen, condition of the bone marrow, genetic determinants, and drug metabolism.69
Adverse effects
Long-term effects of hydroxyurea are still not defined. Given the attack
rate of leukemia, in the multicenter trial patients there is only power to
detect hundredfold increases in the incidence of leukemia or cancer.
Hydroxyurea was given to 64 children with cyanotic congenital heart disease
for a mean treatment duration of over 5 years without any reports of
malignancies.112
Studies of hydroxyurea in patients with myeloproliferative disorders suggest
that in this unique setting about 10% of patients treated with hydroxyurea
develop acute
leukemia.113,114,115,116,117
The author knows of at least three patients with sickle cell disease treated
with hydroxyurea who developed leukemia, two after 6 and 8 years of
treatment118
(Wilson, personal communication; Smith, personal communication). Cellular
changes that may antedate nepotistic transformation, such as increases in
chromosome breakage, recombination, or mutations in selected genes, have not
been reported in hydroxyurea-treated sickle cell anemia
patients.119,120,121
Even with a small risk of leukemogenesis, the benefits of this treatment in
seriously ill patients predominate.
Adverse effects on growth and development have not been reported.75 Unknown is whether continued drug exposure starting at a very young age will be especially hazardousor beneficial. Contraception should be practiced by both women and men receiving hydroxyurea, and the uncertain outcome of an unplanned pregnancy discussed frankly. Pregnancy has been reported in at least 16 women receiving hydroxyurea without adverse outcomes; most had myeloproliferative disorders but six had sickle cell anemia.84,122
Combinations of HbF-inducers and erythropoietin
When both hydroxyurea and erythropoietin were given to patients with sickle
cell anemia, an increment in HbF concentration beyond that seen with
hydroxyurea alone
occurred.123,125
Conclusions
Hydroxyurea is a valuable adjunct for treating severe sickle cell disease.
It must be used carefully with full appreciation of its toxicity and possible
long-term adverse effects. Many questions about its use and effects remain
unanswered. It is not the final word in the pharmacologic therapy of sickle
cell disease but is a promising beginning.
Footnotes
* Life Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, 1 Cyclotron Road,
Bldg. 74-157, Berkeley CA 94720 ![]()
* Duke University Medical Center, PO Box 3934, Durham NC 27710 ![]()
* Pathology and Lab Medicine, UCLA Medical Center, 10833 LeConte Ave.,
A-6238D CHS, Box 951713, Los Angeles CA 90095-1713 ![]()
* Boston University, 88 E Newton, Room 211E, Boston MA 02118 ![]()
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