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Transcranial Doppler ultrasound velocities in a population of unstudied African children with sickle cell anemia.

EJHaem. 2024 Februrary
The greatest burden of sickle cell anemia (SCA) globally occurs in sub-Saharan Africa, where significant morbidity and mortality occur secondary to SCA-induced vasculopathy and stroke. Transcranial Doppler ultrasound (TCD) can grade the severity of vasculopathy, with disease modifying therapy resulting in stroke reduction in high-risk children. However, TCD utilization for vasculopathy detection in African children with SCA remains understudied. The objective was to perform a prospective, observational study of TCD findings in a cohort of children with SCA from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Zambia, and Malawi. A total of 770 children aged 2-17 years without prior stroke underwent screening TCD. A study was scored as low risk when the time-averaged maximum of the mean (TAMMX) in the middle cerebral artery or terminal internal carotid artery was <170 cm/s but >50 cm/s, conditional risk when 170-200 cm/s, and high risk when >200 cm/s. Low-risk studies were identified in 604 children (78%), conditional risk in 129 children (17%), and high risk in three children (0.4%). Additionally, 34 (4%) were scored as having an unknown risk study (TAMMX <50 cm/s). Over the course of 15 months of follow-up, 17 children (2.2%) developed new neurologic symptoms (six with low-risk studies, seven with conditional risk, and four with unknown risk). African children with SCA in this cohort had a low rate of high-risk TCD screening results, even in those who developed new neurologic symptoms. Stroke in this population may be multifactorial with vasculopathy representing only one determinant. The development of a sensitive stroke prediction bundle incorporating relevant elements may help to guide preventative therapies in high-risk children.

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