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Hydroxyurea may prevent complications such as organ damage and stunted
growth in treatment of sickle cell disease

Treating babies who have sickle cell disease (SCD) with oral liquid
hydroxyurea appears to prevent the onset of long-term complications
triggered by this disease, according to results of a preliminary study by
investigators at St. Jude Children's Research Hospital.
The study's findings are important because the onset of damage caused by SCD
complications can occur as early as three months after birth. Starting
treatment before those complications begin could dramatically reduce the
chance of organ damage and premature death. A report on the study appears in
the June 14 online edition of Blood.

In SCD, a genetic mutation causes oxygen-carrying protein hemoglobin (Hb) to
form rigid cords in red blood cells, causing the cells to take on a bent,
sickled shape. The sickled cells clog small blood vessels, causing pain and
serious damage to the brain, kidneys, spleen and other organs; and the
subsequent premature death of the abnormal red cells causes anemia. In the
United States, SCD is found mostly among African Americans.

Hydroxyurea increases the production of fetal hemoglobin (HbF), the main
oxygen transport protein in fetal red blood cells. Because HbF prevents red
blood cells from "sickling," clinicians have used hydroxyurea for about a
decade to reactivate HbF production in adults and older children with SCD.
In addition, hydroxyurea reduces the severity of symptoms suffered by
adolescents and adults with SCD, such as lung infections, organ damage,
stunted growth, impaired brain development and acute chest syndrome (ACS).
ACS refers to an infection in the lungs that causes difficulty breathing,
pain and other symptoms and can be fatal.

The current St. Jude study was an extension of a previous clinical trial,
Hydroxyurea Safety and Organ Toxicity (HUSOFT), which was the first in which
young babies were treated with hydroxyurea. The original HUSOFT study,
published in 2001, demonstrated that short-term oral liquid hydroxyurea
therapy can be safe and effective in babies with SCA. In the extension
study, these infants were followed for up to six years of therapy.

"Our results are promising and justify a larger multicenter clinical trial
to confirm that treating babies with hydroxyurea is safe and effective,"
said Jane S. Hankins, M.D., a physician at the St. Jude Comprehensive Sickle
Cell Center and the study's lead author. "If a larger trial supports our
observations in the HUSOFT Extension, the treatment of sickle cell disease
will undergo a significant change."

"This study is particularly encouraging because it suggests that we can
treat babies with hydroxyurea for several years without side effects serious
enough to limit the use of this drug," said Winfred Wang, M.D., St. Jude
Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center director. "Our aim is to make sickle cell
anemia a survivable disease that doesn't significantly reduce a person's
quality of life." Wang is the senior author of the paper in Blood.

A two-year pilot study of 21 babies with SCD, the original HUSOFT was
designed to examine the feasibility of treating infants with liquid
hydroxyurea; to determine the toxicity of this drug in babies; to assess
hydroxyurea's effects on fetal Hb levels; and to observe if this treatment
could preserve spleen function. Patients received 20 milligrams/kilgrams of
body weight/day (mg/kg/day) of hydroxyurea. All 21 patients who completed
the initial study were enrolled by their parents into the HUSOFT Extension
study. In that study, the dose of hydroxyurea was elevated from 20 to 30
mg/kg/day for an average of 4.0 years (range 2.1 - 6.0 years).

The aim of the HUSOFT Extension was to determine if this higher dose, given
for an extended period of time, provided significant long-term benefits
without causing unacceptable side effects in children ranging in age from
2.6 to 4.4 years (median age 3.4 years).

After four years of hydroxyurea therapy, the concentrations of Hb, HbF and
the volume of red blood cells were significantly increased in the children
receiving hydroxyurea. Moreover, the HbF level often exceeded 20 percent of
the total amount of Hb, Hankins said. "In children who weren't treated with
hydroxyurea, the level of HbF declined significantly," she added. "The fact
that HbF levels rose in babies treated with hydroxyurea suggests that the
drug is effective in babies, as well as in adolescents and adults."

Babies receiving hydroxyurea also weighed more and were taller than those
untreated children 2 to 5 years old who had been observed in a previous,
long-term national study called the Cooperative Study for Sickle Cell
Disease. The average weight gain for babies in the St. Jude study was more
than 4.5 pounds per year; and the gain in height was more than 3 inches, the
researchers report.

"Hydroxyurea could also prove to be an effective way to improve the care of
sickle cell disease patients who live in underprivileged areas of the
world," said Russell E. Ware, M.D., Ph.D., director of the Hematology
division of the Department of Hematology-Oncology at St. Jude. "Treatment
with hydroxyurea requires periodic checkups, but the medication is
relatively inexpensive and should be adaptable to countries with limited
resources," he said. Ware is a co-author of the paper.

Other authors of the article include Zora Rogers (University of Texas,
Dallas); Lynn W. Wynn, MSN, PNP, CCRP (St. Jude); Peter A. Lane (Emory
University, Atlanta, GA); and J. Paul Scott (Medical College of Wisconsin,
Milwaukee).

http://www.stjude.org/


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