Abstract

IntroductionSickle Cell Disease (SCD) and albinism are both recessive hereditary diseases in human kind with a high prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa. This study aimed to determinate the prevalence of sickle cell trait in people living with albinism (PLA).Methodsa cross-sectional descriptive survey was conducted in PLA attending the "Hôpital du Cinquantenaire de Kisangani". In total, by non-probabilistic convenience sampling, 82 albinos and 139 non-albinos and without any antecedents of albinism in their family were included, selected from students in the Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy at the University of Kisangani. Blood samples were collected on "dried blood spot" and analyzed by mass spectrometry at CHU of Liège. Data were entered into an Excel file and analysed on SPSS 20.0 (Chicago, IL).Resultsforty-six of the 82 albinos (56.1%) were female and 43.9% male with a sex ratio of 1.28. Among albinos, 18.3% had hemoglobin AS (HbAS) and 81.7% hemoglobin AA (HbAA) compared to 18% of subjects with hemoglobin AS and 82% hemoglobin AA in the control group. The difference was not statistically significant (Chi-square=0.003, ddl=1, p=0.9544).Conclusionthis study highlighted that the prevalence of the sickle cell trait is high among people living with albinism, but does not differ from that observed in non-albinos in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. It is therefore important to raise awareness among this category of people about sickle cell disease and the importance of its premarital screening.

Highlights

  • Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) and albinism are both recessive hereditary diseases in human kind with a high prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa

  • 18.3% had AS hemoglobin (HbAS) and 81.7% hemoglobin AA (HbAA) compared to 18% of subjects with hemoglobin AS and 82% hemoglobin AA in the control group

  • Our results show that the prevalence of the sickle cell trait is high among people living with albinism, but does not differ from that observed in non-albinos in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

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Summary

Introduction

Sickle Cell Disease (SCD) and albinism are both recessive hereditary diseases in human kind with a high prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa. Conclusion: this study highlighted that the prevalence of the sickle cell trait is high among people living with albinism, but does not differ from that observed in non-albinos in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Sickle cell anemia and albinism are both recessive hereditary diseases in humans with a high prevalence in sub-Saharan Africa populations [1]. Glutamic acid is replaced by valine at the sixth position of β-globin on chromosome 11, leading to the formation of sickle red blood cells (RBC) containing abnormal hemoglobin (HbS: α2βS2), rather than normal adult hemoglobin (HbA: α2β2) [3]. The syndromic forms include Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome, related to the HPS-1 gene and Chediak-Higashi syndrome, related to the CHS-1 gene [4,6,7,8,9,10,11]

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