Thalassaemia

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Lancet Publishing Group

Abstract

Inherited haemoglobin disorders, including thalassaemia and sickle-cell disease, are the most common monogenic diseases worldwide. Several clinical forms of α-thalassaemia and β-thalassaemia, including the co-inheritance of β-thalassaemia with haemoglobin E resulting in haemoglobin E/β-thalassaemia, have been described. The disease hallmarks include imbalance in the α/β-globin chain ratio, ineffective erythropoiesis, chronic haemolytic anaemia, compensatory haemopoietic expansion, hypercoagulability, and increased intestinal iron absorption. The complications of iron overload, arising from transfusions that represent the basis of disease management in most patients with severe thalassaemia, might further complicate the clinical phenotype. These pathophysiological mechanisms lead to an array of clinical manifestations involving numerous organ systems. Conventional management primarily relies on transfusion and iron-chelation therapy, as well as splenectomy in specific cases. An increased understanding of the molecular and pathogenic factors that govern the disease process have suggested routes for the development of new therapeutic approaches that address the underlying chain imbalance, ineffective erythropoiesis, and iron dysregulation, with several agents being evaluated in preclinical models and clinical trials. © 2018 Elsevier Ltd

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Humans, Thalassemia, Deferasirox, Deferiprone, Deferoxamine, Ferritin, Hemoglobin a, Hemoglobin alpha chain, Hemoglobin beta chain, Hemoglobin f, Reactive oxygen metabolite, Alpha thalassemia, Beta globin gene, Beta thalassemia, Cell death, Cell proliferation, Chelation therapy, Disease burden, Disease classification, Disease severity, Dna determination, Erythrocyte transfusion, Erythroid precursor cell, Erythropoiesis, Gene cluster, Gene deletion, Gene expression, Gene locus, Gene product, Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, Heterozygosity, Human, Hypercoagulability, Iron absorption, Iron chelation, Iron overload, Morbidity, Nonhuman, Pathophysiology, Patient care, Practice guideline, Priority journal, Review, Screening, Splenectomy, Survival, Thalassemia intermedia

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