Abstract
Glucose-6-phosphate deficiency is the most prevalent enzyme deficiency, with an estimated 400 million people affected worldwide. This inherited deficiency causes neonatal hyperbilirubinemia and chronic hemolytic anemia. Although most affected individuals are asymptomatic, exposure to oxidative stressors such as certain drugs or infection, can elicit acute hemolysis. To characterize the global prevalence of G6PD deficiency, we conducted a systematic review of the G6PD deficiency literature, drawing studies from various databases, including MEDLINE/Pubmed and Biosis. Selected studies included cross-sectional and longitudinal studies published between 1960 and 2008. Additionally, meta-analytic procedures were employed to assess the degree of heterogeneity amongst prevalence estimates and, where appropriate, pool them. The searches yielded a total of 280 prevalence estimates, corresponding to 88 countries. The highest prevalence rates were reported among Sub-Saharan African countries, even after adjusting for assessment method. Meta-analysis revealed a high degree of heterogeneity for regional and global prevalence estimates. This heterogeneity in reported estimates appeared to be due to differences in G6PD deficiency assessment and diagnostic procedures. The magnitude and variation in global, regional, and country-level prevalence rates of G6PD deficiency are of public health import, particularly in planning programs to improve neonatal health and in the distribution of various medications, especially antimalarial drugs, as G6PD deficiency is most prevalent in malaria-endemic areas.
Highlights
To cite this version: Yannis Michalakis, Mircea Sofonea, Samuel Alizon
The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers
Des facteurs sociologiques, comme la pauvreté, semblent affecter la surmortalité imputable au COVID-19 (Brandily et al 2020), bien que le lien entre surmortalité due au COVID-19, pays de naissance et niveau de pauvreté reste à être étudié
Summary
To cite this version: Yannis Michalakis, Mircea Sofonea, Samuel Alizon. Les effets sexe spécifiques de COVID-19 en France et l’implication potentielle des déficits en G6PD. [Rapport de recherche] 11, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS); Institut de recherche pour le développement (IRD); Université de Montpellier (UM), FRA. 2020. hal-02950702. Les effets sexe spécifiques de COVID-19 en France et l’implication potentielle des déficits en G6PD
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