Table 2.

Therapeutic options for SCA with potential relevance for sub-Saharan Africa

TreatmentAdvantages and indicationsDisadvantages and challenges
Erythrocyte transfusions • Treatment of severe anemia due to splenic sequestration, parvovirus infection, or malaria • Lack of sufficient blood donors 
• Additional oxygen-carrying capacity for life-threatening acute vaso-occlusion and organ damage • Infection transmission (HIV, hepatitis B and C, syphilis) 
• Effective treatment option for stroke and other neurologic complications • Erythrocyte alloimmunization 
• Inability to prepare blood components 
• Eventual need for iron chelation 
Hydroxyurea • Reduction of acute vaso-occlusive complications (pain, acute chest syndrome) • Limited drug availability 
• Oral administration • High cost relative to daily wages 
• Once-daily dosing • Optimal dosing not yet determined 
• Documented laboratory and clinical efficacy and efficacy • Cost and feasibility of routine laboratory monitoring, including WBC differential and reticulocytes 
• Low cost compared with alternatives • Inability to measure quantitative %HbF 
Stem cell transplantation • Potential cure • Lack of facilities and clinical expertise 
• Availability of full siblings, which increases the chance of HLA matching 
• Limited technology for HLA typing, cell processing, and preparation 
• Inadequate supportive care (antibiotics, transfusions, isolation rooms) 
• High risk of morbidity (graft versus host disease) and mortality 
• Extremely high cost 
TreatmentAdvantages and indicationsDisadvantages and challenges
Erythrocyte transfusions • Treatment of severe anemia due to splenic sequestration, parvovirus infection, or malaria • Lack of sufficient blood donors 
• Additional oxygen-carrying capacity for life-threatening acute vaso-occlusion and organ damage • Infection transmission (HIV, hepatitis B and C, syphilis) 
• Effective treatment option for stroke and other neurologic complications • Erythrocyte alloimmunization 
• Inability to prepare blood components 
• Eventual need for iron chelation 
Hydroxyurea • Reduction of acute vaso-occlusive complications (pain, acute chest syndrome) • Limited drug availability 
• Oral administration • High cost relative to daily wages 
• Once-daily dosing • Optimal dosing not yet determined 
• Documented laboratory and clinical efficacy and efficacy • Cost and feasibility of routine laboratory monitoring, including WBC differential and reticulocytes 
• Low cost compared with alternatives • Inability to measure quantitative %HbF 
Stem cell transplantation • Potential cure • Lack of facilities and clinical expertise 
• Availability of full siblings, which increases the chance of HLA matching 
• Limited technology for HLA typing, cell processing, and preparation 
• Inadequate supportive care (antibiotics, transfusions, isolation rooms) 
• High risk of morbidity (graft versus host disease) and mortality 
• Extremely high cost 

HLA, human leukocyte antigen; WBC, white blood cell.

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