Title: Hematology 425 Thalassemias
1Hematology 425 Thalassemias
- Russ Morrison
- November 17, 2006
2Thalassemias
- Thalassemias are a diverse group of inherited
disorders caused by gene mutations - These gene mutations reduce or completely
eliminate the synthesis of one or more of the
globin chains of the Hgb tetramer - The homozygous state for the abnormal autosomal
gene for beta-globin chain synthesis (Cooleys
anemia) has become known as thalassemia major
3Thalassemias
- The heterozygous state for the abnormal gene for
beta-globin chain synthesis is called thalassemia
minor - The heterozygous, milder forms of thalassemia are
the most frequent genetic defect in humans - The homozygous, more sever forms are capable of
causing significant morbidity and mortality
4Thalassemias
- Thalassemia is a group of disorders defined as a
condition in which a reduction in the rate of
production of one or more of the globin chains
leads to - Imbalanced globin chain production
- Defective Hgb production
- Damage to the RBCs or their precursors by the
buildup of the globin chain that is produced in
excess
5Thalassemias
- Usually it is the synthesis of either the alpha
or beta chains of hemoglobin A (HbA a2ß2) that
is impaired - Thalassemias are named according to the chain
with reduced or absent globin synthesis
6Thalassemias Genetic Control of Hgb Synthesis
- The normal Hgb molecule is a tetramer (double
dimer) of two alpha-like chains (either a or ?)
with two beta-like chains (either ß, ?, d or e) - Combinations of these chains produce six normal
hemoglobins - Three of the normal Hgbs are embryonic
- Gower-1 (?2e2)
- Gower-2 (a2e2)
- Portland (?2?2)
7Thalassemias Genetic Control of Hgb Synthesis
- The other three normal Hgbs are
- Fetal (a2?2)
- A (a2 ß2)
- A2 (a2 d 2)
- By the 10th week of gestation, zeta and epsilon
chain production ceases and gamma chain synthesis
begins - The gamma chains combine with alpha chains to
make HbF, which predominates during fetal life
8Thalassemias Genetic Control of Hgb Synthesis
- After birth, gamma chain production decreases and
beta chains are the predominant chains produced - The transition from gamma chain to beta chain
globin production is called the gamma-to-beta
switch - HbA is 95-97 of normal adult Hgb, HbA2 is 2-3
and HbF is 2
9Thalassemias Genetic Control of Hgb Synthesis
- The alpha and zeta genes are located on the short
arm of chromosome 16 - The cluster of beta-like genes is distributed on
the short arm of chromosome 11 - The alpha gene loci are duplicated on each
chromosome 16 and named a1 and a2 - With this duplication of alpha genes a normal
genotype would be aa/aa
10Thalassemias Genetic Control of Hgb Synthesis
- An individual inherits one each of the five
functional genes (ß, G?, A?, d or e) on both
chromosomes 11 - The genotype for normal beta chain synthesis
would be designated as ß/ß
11Categories of Thalassemia
- Thalassemias are divided into ß thalassemias,
which include all of the disorders of reduced
globin chains affecting the cluster of genes on
C11 and - a thalassemias, which involve the a1 and a2
loci on C16 - The ß-thalassemias affect mainly the beta chain
production, but may also involve delta, gamma
(both types) and epsilon chains
12Categories of Thalassemia
- Included in the ß-thalassemia group is ß0-
thalassemia, in which no beta chains are produced
from the beta gene locus on one C11 - Additional designations for the main group of
thalassemias are included in table 25-2 of the
text
13Thalassemia Geographic Distribution
- Thalassemias are found world-wide, but some
geographic regions demonstrate higher
concentrations - Beta-thalassemia is more common in Mediterranean
regions (southern Italy and Greece) while
alpha-thalassemia is more common in Thailand,
China, the Philippines and other Asian countries
14Thalassemia Geographic Distribution
- It has been suggested that the frequency of
thalassemia may be associated with selective
advantage of protection from malaria - It is theorized that malarial parasites can not
acquire sufficient nutrients from digestion of
Hgb in thalassemic cells - Alpha- and beta-thalassemic RBCs may bind greater
levels of anti-malarial antibodies than other
cells leading to greater removal of parasitized
RBCs
15Thalassemia-Pathophysiology
- Pathophysiology of the thalassemias is due to the
imbalance of globin chain synthesis - In B-thalassemia, imbalanced production of globin
chains results in a lack of hemoglobin produced
in the erythroid precursors - This, in turn, results in hypochromic, microcytic
RBCs - It also results in excess unpaired globin chains,
which precipitate in the developing RBCs, causing
surface membrane damage in both developing and
mature cells
16Thalassemia-Pathophysiology
- This causes ineffective erythropoiesis (cells
being destroyed in the marrow) or premature
hemolysis of peripheral RBCs through removal by
macrophages - Persons are asymptomatic during fetal life and up
to 4-6 months of age because they are protected
by HbF (a2?2) - They begin to demonstrate symptoms after the
gamma-to-beta switch
17Thalassemia-Pathophysiology
- In a-thalassemia, non-alpha-chain production has
different consequences - Because alpha chains are shared by both fetal and
adult hemoglobins, all stages of life (fetus
through adult) are impacted - In the fetus there is excess gamma-chain
production, which produces ?4 tetramers - These tetramers do not precipitate in the BM, but
do precipitate in the PB
18Thalassemia-Pathophysiology
- In the PB, the precipitates form RBC inclusion
bodies followed by removal of the cells from the
circulation by the spleen - A hemolytic process develops with RBCs that are
microcytic and hypochromic due to decreased
hemoglobin synthesis and incorporation into the
RBCs
19Thalassemia-Genetic Defects
- Research has shown that there are many different
types of defects at the molecular level that lead
to thalassemia - Genetic defects that cause a decrease or lack of
production of a particular globin chain are - Single nucleotide (or point) mutation that
interferes with one of the critical steps in
messenger mRNA production, causing the amount of
mRNA to be decreased
20Thalassemia-Genetic Defects
- Base substitutions that alter promoter function
RNA processing, or mRNA translation or modify a
codon into a nonsense codon that leads to
premature termination of translation or to the
substitution of an incorrect amino acid - Insertion or deletion mutations within the coding
region of the mRNA creating frameshifts that
prevent the synthesis of a complete, normal
globin polypeptide
21Thalassemia-Genetic Defects
- large deletion within the alpha- or beta-globin
clusters that removes one or more genes or alters
the regulation of the remaining genes in the
cluster - All of these varied genetic defects or mutations
cause a decrease in or lack of synthesis of one
globin chain, resulting in a thalassemia syndrome
22Clinical Syndromes of ß-Thalassemia
- ß-thalassemia is divided into three clinical
syndromes - ?-thalassemia minor (heterozygous), a mild
microcytic, hyochromic hemolytic anemia - ?-thalassemia major (homozygous), a severe
transfusion-dependent anemia - ?-thalassemia intermedia, with symptoms of
severity between the first two
23Clinical Syndromes of ß-Thalassemia
- A fourth syndrome designated as a silent carrier
has also been described - Many of the mutations cause the beta gene to not
be expressed at all (ß0 gene) - Others cause a variable decrease in production of
beta chain (ß gene) - ß genes produce from 10 to 50 of normal
beta-chain synthesis
24Clinical Syndromes of ß-Thalassemia
- The silent carrier state results in almost
normal beta-chain production and was recognized
through family studies - If a patient is homozygous for this carrier
state, serious hemolytic anemia will develop - Other thalassemias may be caused by alterations
of the beta cluster genes
25Thalassemia Major
26Thalassemia Minor
27ß-Thalassemia - Prognosis
- Individuals with thalassemia minor (thalassemia
trait) usually have asymptomatic mild anemia.
This state does not result in mortality or
significant morbidity. - The prognosis of patients with thalassemia major
is highly dependent on the patient's adherence to
long-term treatment programs, namely the
hypertransfusion program and life-long iron
chelation. Allogeneic bone marrow transplantation
may be curative.
28a-Thalassemias
- In contrast to the beta-globin cluster, in which
point mutations are the most common cause of
thalassemia, large deletions in the alpha-globin
genes are the predominant cause of a-thalassemia - The degree of decreased production of the alpha
chain depends on - The specific mutation
- The number of alpha genes affected
- Whether an a2 or a1 gene is affected
29a-Thalassemias
- The a2 gene is thought to produce approximately
75 of the alpha-globin chains in normal RBCs - Notation for the normal alpha gene haplotype is
aa, signifying there are two normal genes (a2 and
a1) on one C16 - The normal genotype is aa/aa
30a-Thalassemias
- a-thalassemias may also be divided into
a-thalassemia which have decreased production
from the alpha-chain complex and a0-thalassemia
in which no alpha-globin is produced - The most common deletions generate one chromosome
bearing a single alpha gene and another with two
alpha-globin genes
31a-Thalassemias
- Clinical syndromes of a-thalassemia are listed in
table 25-5 of the text - Homozygous a-thalassemia (--/--) is incompatible
with life and results in the absence of all alpha
chain synthesis - The infant is born with hydrops fetalis, which is
edema caused by accumulation of serous fluid in
the fetal tissues as a result of severe anemia - Infants with this genotype deliver prematurely
and are stillborn or die shortly after birth
32Thalassemias
- As discussed in chapter 24, a variant hemoglobin
may be inherited along with a thalassemia, as
seen in HbC-thalassemia - Diagnosis of thalassemia is made from the RBC
morphology, Hgb electrophoresis, Heinz body test
and HbA2 and HbF quantitation - Thalassemia must be differentiated from other
microcytic, hypochromic anemias, especially iron
deficiency anemia and iron studies are an
important part of this differentiation