A National Registry of Thalassemia in Turkey: Demographic and Disease Characteristics of Patients, Achievements, and Challenges in Prevention

Yeşim Aydınok(Ege University), Yeşim Oymak(Ege University), Berna Atabay(Ege University), Gönül Aydoğan(Ege University), Akif Yeşilipek(Ege University), Selma Ünal(Ege University), Yurdanur Kılınç(Ege University), Banu Oflaz(Ege University), Mehmet Akın(Ege University), Canan Vergin(Ege University), Melike Sezgin Evim(Ege University), Ümran Çalışkan(Ege University), Şule Ünal(Ege University), Ali Bay(Ege University), Elif Güler Kazancı(Ege University), Talia İleri(Ege University), Didem Atay(Ege University), Türkan Patıroğlu(Ege University), Selda Kahraman(Ege University), Murat Söker(Ege University), Mediha Akcan(Ege University), Aydan Akdeniz(Ege University), Mustafa Büyükavcı(Ege University), Güçhan Alanoğlu(Turkish Society of Hematology), Özcan Bör(Turkish Society of Hematology), Nur Soyer(Ege University), Nihal Karadaş(Turkish Society of Hematology), Ezgi Paslı Uysalol(Ege University), Meral Türker(Ege University), Arzu Akçay(Ege University), Süheyla Ocak(Ege University), Adalet Meral Güneş(Turkish Society of Hematology), Hüseyin Tokgöz(Ege University), Elif Ünal(Ege University), Naci Tiftik(Ege University), Zeynep Karakaş(Ege University)
Turkish Journal of Hematology
April 11, 2017
Cited by 48Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The Turkish Society of Pediatric Hematology set up a National Hemoglobinopathy Registry to demonstrate the demographic and disease characteristics of patients and assess the efficacy of a hemoglobinopathy control program (HCP) over 10 years in Turkey. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 2046 patients from 27 thalassemia centers were registered, of which 1988 were eligible for analysis. This cohort mainly comprised patients with β-thalassemia major (n=1658, 83.4%) and intermedia (n=215, 10.8%). RESULTS: The majority of patients were from the coastal areas of Turkey. The high number of patients in Southeastern Anatolia was due to that area having the highest rates of consanguineous marriage and fertility. The most common 11 mutations represented 90% of all β-thalassemia alleles and 47% of those were IVS1-110(G->A) mutations. The probability of undergoing splenectomy within the first 10 years of life was 20%, a rate unchanged since the 1980s. Iron chelators were administered as monotherapy regimens in 95% of patients and deferasirox was prescribed in 81.3% of those cases. Deferasirox administration was the highest (93.6%) in patients aged <10 years. Of the thalassemia major patients, 5.8% had match-related hemopoietic stem cell transplantation with a success rate of 77%. Cardiac disease was detected as a major cause of death and did not show a decreasing trend in 5-year cohorts since 1999. CONCLUSION: While the HCP has been implemented since 2003, the affected births have shown a consistent decrease only after 2009, being at lowest 34 cases per year. This program failure resulted from a lack of premarital screening in the majority of cases. Additional problems were unawareness of the risk and misinformation of the at-risk couples. In addition, prenatal diagnosis was either not offered to or was not accepted by the at-risk families. This study indicated that a continuous effort is needed for optimizing the management of thalassemia and the development of strategies is essential for further achievements in the HCP in Turkey.


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