Cognitive involvement in beta-thalassaemia is strikingly controversial and poorly studied in adulthood. This multicentre prospective study investigated 74 adult neurologically-asymptomatic beta-thalassaemia patients (mean-age 34·5 ± 10·3 years; 53 transfusion-dependent [TDT], 21 non-transfusion dependent [NTDT]) and 45 healthy volunteers (mean-age 33·9 ± 10·7 years). Participants underwent testing with Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Fourth Edition (WAIS-IV), Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and multiparametric brain 3T-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for parenchymal, vascular and iron content evaluation. Patients had lower Full-Scale Intelligence Quotient (FSIQ) than controls (75·5 ± 17·9 vs. 97·4 ± 18·1, P < 0·0001) even after correction for education level. Compared to TDT, NTDT showed a trend of higher FSIQ (P = 0·08) but a similar cognitive profile at WAIS-subtests. FSIQ correlated with total and indirect bilirubin (P < 0·0001 and P = 0·002, respectively); no correlation was found with splenectomy, intracranial MRI/magnetic resonance-angiography findings, brain tissue iron content or other disease-related clinical/laboratory/treatment data. FSIQ did not correlate with BPRS scores, although the latter were higher among patients (28·74 ± 3·1 vs. 27·29 ± 4·8, P = 0·01) mainly because of increased depression and anxiety levels. Occupation rate was higher among controls (84·4% vs. 64·9%, P = 0·004) and correlated with higher FSIQ (P = 0·001) and education level (P = 0·001). In conclusion, Italian adult beta-thalassaemia patients seem to present a characteristic cognitive profile impairment and an increased rate of psychological disorders with possible profound long-term socio-economic consequences.

Brain functional impairment in beta-thalassaemia: the cognitive profile in Italian neurologically asymptomatic adult patients in comparison to the reported literature / Tartaglione, I.; Manara, R.; Caiazza, M.; Carafa, P. A.; Caserta, V.; Ferrantino, T.; Granato, I.; Ippolito, N.; Maietta, C.; Oliveto, T.; Casale, M.; Di Concilio, R.; Ciancio, A.; De Michele, E.; Russo, C.; Elefante, A.; Ponticorvo, S.; Russo, A. G.; Femina, G.; Canna, A.; Ermani, M.; Cirillo, M.; Esposito, F.; Centanni, A.; Gritti, P.; Perrotta, S.. - In: BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY. - ISSN 0007-1048. - 186:4(2019), pp. 592-607. [10.1111/bjh.15959]

Brain functional impairment in beta-thalassaemia: the cognitive profile in Italian neurologically asymptomatic adult patients in comparison to the reported literature

Elefante A.;Canna A.;
2019

Abstract

Cognitive involvement in beta-thalassaemia is strikingly controversial and poorly studied in adulthood. This multicentre prospective study investigated 74 adult neurologically-asymptomatic beta-thalassaemia patients (mean-age 34·5 ± 10·3 years; 53 transfusion-dependent [TDT], 21 non-transfusion dependent [NTDT]) and 45 healthy volunteers (mean-age 33·9 ± 10·7 years). Participants underwent testing with Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-Fourth Edition (WAIS-IV), Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) and multiparametric brain 3T-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for parenchymal, vascular and iron content evaluation. Patients had lower Full-Scale Intelligence Quotient (FSIQ) than controls (75·5 ± 17·9 vs. 97·4 ± 18·1, P < 0·0001) even after correction for education level. Compared to TDT, NTDT showed a trend of higher FSIQ (P = 0·08) but a similar cognitive profile at WAIS-subtests. FSIQ correlated with total and indirect bilirubin (P < 0·0001 and P = 0·002, respectively); no correlation was found with splenectomy, intracranial MRI/magnetic resonance-angiography findings, brain tissue iron content or other disease-related clinical/laboratory/treatment data. FSIQ did not correlate with BPRS scores, although the latter were higher among patients (28·74 ± 3·1 vs. 27·29 ± 4·8, P = 0·01) mainly because of increased depression and anxiety levels. Occupation rate was higher among controls (84·4% vs. 64·9%, P = 0·004) and correlated with higher FSIQ (P = 0·001) and education level (P = 0·001). In conclusion, Italian adult beta-thalassaemia patients seem to present a characteristic cognitive profile impairment and an increased rate of psychological disorders with possible profound long-term socio-economic consequences.
2019
Brain functional impairment in beta-thalassaemia: the cognitive profile in Italian neurologically asymptomatic adult patients in comparison to the reported literature / Tartaglione, I.; Manara, R.; Caiazza, M.; Carafa, P. A.; Caserta, V.; Ferrantino, T.; Granato, I.; Ippolito, N.; Maietta, C.; Oliveto, T.; Casale, M.; Di Concilio, R.; Ciancio, A.; De Michele, E.; Russo, C.; Elefante, A.; Ponticorvo, S.; Russo, A. G.; Femina, G.; Canna, A.; Ermani, M.; Cirillo, M.; Esposito, F.; Centanni, A.; Gritti, P.; Perrotta, S.. - In: BRITISH JOURNAL OF HAEMATOLOGY. - ISSN 0007-1048. - 186:4(2019), pp. 592-607. [10.1111/bjh.15959]
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Brain functional impairment in beta‐thalassaemia_ the cognitive profile in Italian neurologically asymptomatic adult patients in comparison to the reported literature.pdf

solo utenti autorizzati

Descrizione: ARTICOLO PRINCIPALE
Tipologia: Documento in Post-print
Licenza: Accesso privato/ristretto
Dimensione 721.77 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
721.77 kB Adobe PDF   Visualizza/Apri   Richiedi una copia

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/771258
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 19
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 15
social impact