A paradigm shift on beta-thalassaemia treatment: How will we manage this old disease with new therapies?
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Churchill Livingstone
Abstract
Beta-thalassaemia causes defective haemoglobin synthesis leading to ineffective erythropoiesis, chronic haemolytic anaemia, and subsequent clinical complications. Blood transfusion and iron chelation allow long-term disease control, and haematopoietic stem cell transplantation offers a potential cure for some patients. Nonetheless, there are still many challenges in the management of beta-thalassaemia. The main treatment option for most patients is supportive care; furthermore, the long-term efficacy and safety of current therapeutic strategies are limited and adherence is suboptimal. An increasing understanding of the underlying molecular and cellular disease mechanisms plus an awareness of limitations of current management strategies are driving research into novel therapeutic options. Here we provide an overview of the current pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, and global burden of beta-thalassaemia. We reflect on what has been achieved to date, describe the challenges associated with currently available therapy, and discuss how these issues might be addressed by novel therapeutic approaches in development. © 2018 The Authors
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Keywords
Blood transfusion, Chronic haemolytic anaemia, Ineffective erythropoiesis, Iron overload, Novel therapies, Thalassaemia, Animals, Beta-thalassemia, Combined modality therapy, Disease management, Erythropoiesis, Humans, Phenotype, Quality of life, Symptom assessment, Activin receptor 2, Deferoxamine, Ferroportin, Globin, Hepcidin, Hypoxia inducible factor 2alpha, Iron chelating agent, Janus kinase 2 inhibitor, Luspatercept, Rap 536, Sotatercept, Beta thalassemia, Cell maturation, Clinical feature, Diagnostic test, Disease burden, Disease severity, Enzyme inhibition, Erythrocyte, Gene editing, Gene therapy, Health economics, Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, Human, Hypoxemia, Iron chelation, Pathophysiology, Point mutation, Priority journal, Review, Splenectomy, Animal, Genetics, Multimodality cancer therapy