Haematologica (Apr 2015)

A genetic score for the prediction of beta-thalassemia severity

  • Fabrice Danjou,
  • Marcella Francavilla,
  • Franco Anni,
  • Stefania Satta,
  • Franca-Rosa Demartis,
  • Lucia Perseu,
  • Matteo Manca,
  • Maria Carla Sollaino,
  • Laura Manunza,
  • Elisabetta Mereu,
  • Giuseppe Marceddu,
  • Serge Pissard,
  • Philippe Joly,
  • Isabelle Thuret,
  • Raffaella Origa,
  • Joseph Borg,
  • Gian Luca Forni,
  • Antonio Piga,
  • Maria Eliana Lai,
  • Catherine Badens,
  • Paolo Moi,
  • Renzo Galanello

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3324/haematol.2014.113886
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 100, no. 4

Abstract

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Clinical and hematologic characteristics of beta(β)-thalassemia are determined by several factors resulting in a wide spectrum of severity. Phenotype modulators are: HBB mutations, HBA defects and fetal hemoglobin production modulators (HBG2:g.−158C>T polymorphism, HBS1L-MYB intergenic region and the BCL11A). We characterized 54 genetic variants at these five loci robustly associated with the amelioration of beta-thalassemia phenotype, to build a predictive score of severity using a representative cohort of 890 β-thalassemic patients. Using Cox proportional hazard analysis on a training set, we assessed the effect of these loci on the age at which patient started regular transfusions, built a Thalassemia Severity Score, and validated it on a testing set. Discriminatory power of the model was high (C-index=0.705; R2=0.343) and the validation conducted on the testing set confirmed its predictive accuracy with transfusion-free survival probability (P