His screening is especially important in tribal and high-risk areas of India, where many cases go undiagnosed, leading to early childhood deaths
Post-birth diagnosis resulting in early treatment can substantially improve the
quality of life and reduce mortality in patients with sickle cell disease to
less than five per cent from the reported 20-30 per cent, according to an ICMR
study.
As many as 63,536 newborns were
tested over a five-year period from 2019-2024 as part of the study on Newborn
Screening for Sickle Cell Disease conducted by the National Institute of
Immunohaematology in Mumbai under the India Council of Medical Research (ICMR)
across seven centres in high prevalence areas of India.
The study is yet to be published.
The newborn
screening programme helps find out if a baby is born with Sickle Cell Disease
(SCD), a serious inherited blood disorder, soon after birth, explained Dr
Manisha Madkaikar, director of ICMR-Centre for Research Management and Control
of Haemoglobinopathies (CRHCM) in Nagpur.
“If not detected early, this disease can cause
life-threatening problems like severe infections, anaemia (low blood levels),
and even strokes in infants," she said.
"Finding the disease early can
save lives by allowing doctors to start treatment before problems begin,” Dr
Prabhakar Kedar, Scientist F, ICMR-NIIH , who is the principal investigator of
the study, said.
Babies diagnosed early can be given preventive antibiotics
(like penicillin) to avoid infections and get regular checkups and care from
specialists, Dr Madkaikar said.
Early detection also helps in getting important vaccines to
protect against serious illnesses while parents can also be taught the signs of
danger so they can act quickly.
It also helps families and doctors plan long-term treatment,
provides genetic counselling to the family, and increases awareness, reducing
the number of future cases, Dr Madkaikar explained.
This screening is especially important in tribal and
high-risk areas of India, where many cases go undiagnosed, leading to early
childhood deaths, Dr Kedar highlighted.
“With screening, many of these deaths can be prevented,” he
said.
During the study, 7,275 babies (11.4 per cent) were found to
be carriers of the sickle cell gene. This means they don’t have the disease but
can pass it on to their children, Dr Kedar said, adding, 569 babies (0.9 per
cent) were found to have SCD.
These babies were followed up for the confirmation of
diagnosis, parents were counselled about SCD, preventive measures to be taken
for or to avoid complications, and informed about prenatal diagnosis to avoid
any further births of affected children in the family.
“The babies were given comprehensive care, including
penicillin prophylaxis, folic acid supplementation, appropriate vaccinations
and hydroxyurea therapy, as indicated. This resulted in reduction in mortality
in these children to less than 5 per cent from the earlier reported mortality
of 20-30 per cent,” Dr Kedar said.
This study shows that newborn screening works and can save
lives, especially in places with a high number of cases like tribal areas, Dr
Kedar said. This study was coordinated by Dr Harpreet Kaur, senior scientists
at ICMR, Delhi.
“By detecting Sickle Cell Disease early, babies can get
timely care, live healthier lives, and families can be better prepared,” Dr
Kedar said.
The seven centres which participated in the study are
National Institute For Implementation Research on Non-Communicable Diseases in
Jodhpur, Society for Education, Welfare and Action-Rural (SEWA -Rural) in
Gujarat, the Nilgiris Adivasi Welfare Association (NAWA), Tamil Nadu, ICMR-
National Institute for Research in Reproductive Health in Mumbai, ICMR-National
Institute of Research in Tribal Health (NIRTH) in Jabalpur, ICMR-Regional
Medical Research Centre, Bhubaneswar and ICMR- Centre for Research Management
and Control of Haemoglobinopathies (CRHCM) in Chandrapur.
Of the total 63,536 newborns tested, 57 per cent belonged to tribal parents and rest from others, Dr Kedar informed.
The aim of the study was also to
understand the regional variability and role of genetic modifiers in sickle
cell disease as well as to identify barriers for newborn screening
implementation, he explained.
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