AI Article Synopsis

  • The mortality burden of sickle cell anemia (SCA) is mainly felt in sub-Saharan Africa due to a lack of systematic early diagnosis programs and limited access to treatments, particularly in rural areas.
  • Challenges such as inadequate blood supply and barriers to hydroxyurea treatment, such as high costs and healthcare provider hesitance, hinder effective management of the disease and its complications.
  • While gene therapies show promise as future treatment options, prioritizing the universal accessibility of hydroxyurea remains crucial for improving SCA outcomes in Africa.

Article Abstract

The mortality burden of sickle cell anemia (SCA) is centered in sub-Saharan Africa. In addition to a lack of systematic programs for early diagnosis, access to disease-modifying treatments is limited to only a few urban centers. Providing a safe and adequate blood supply is a major challenge, heightening mortality from SCA-associated complications that require urgent blood transfusion and making the delivery of regular transfusion therapy for stroke prevention nonfeasible. Hydroxyurea therapy with proven clinical benefits for pain episodes, acute chest syndrome, malaria, transfusions, hospitalizations, and stroke prevention is the most feasible treatment for SCA in Africa. Access barriers to hydroxyurea treatment include poor availability, unaffordable costs, health professionals' reluctance to prescribe, a lack of national guidelines, and exaggerated fears about drug toxicities. Strategies for the local manufacture of hydroxyurea combined with the systematic education and training of health professionals using guidelines supported by the World Health Organization can help surmount the access barriers. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation as a curative therapy is available in only 7 countries in Africa. The few patients who have suitable sibling donors and can afford a transplant must usually travel out of the country for treatment, returning to their home countries where expertise and resources for posttransplant follow-up are lacking. The recently developed ex-vivo gene therapies are heavily dependent on technical infrastructure to deliver, a daunting challenge for Africa. Future in-vivo gene therapies that bypass myeloablation and ex-vivo processing would be more suitable. However, enthusiasm for pursuing these gene therapies should not overlook strategies to make hydroxyurea universally accessible in Africa.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11665607PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/hematology.2024000550DOI Listing

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