Children (Jun 2024)

The Relevance of β-Thalassemia Heterozygosity in Pediatric Clinical Practice: Croatian Experience

  • Ana Dordevic,
  • Milena Ugrin,
  • Ines Mrakovcic Sutic,
  • Jelena Roganovic,
  • Sonja Pavlovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/children11070785
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 785

Abstract

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(1) Background: Thalassemia syndromes are common monogenic disorders that represent a significant global health issue. No systematic epidemiological or molecular investigations on thalassemias in the Croatian population have been reported to date. (2) Methods: This prospective study included 70 children with a presumptive diagnosis of thalassemia and their 42 first-degree relatives. Molecular characterization was performed using direct sequencing and gap-PCR methods. (3) Results: We identified 46 (30 children and 16 first-degree relatives) β-thalassemia heterozygous carriers from 24 unrelated families, carrying eight different mutations and one hemoglobin variant. Five variants account for approximately 85% of all affected β-globin alleles: Hb Lepore-Boston-Washington (32.6%), HBB:c.93-21G>A (19.6%), HBB:c.315+1G>A (13.1%), HBB:c.92+1G>A (10.9%), and HBB:c.92+6T>C (8.7%) variants. (4) Conclusions: β-thalassemia carriers need more detailed genetic profiling since genetic modifiers can significantly impact their phenotype. Our study provides important new insights into the relevance of β-thalassemia heterozygosity in pediatric clinical practice.

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