Effect of age, cerebral infarcts, vasculopathy and haemoglobin on cognitive function, in Tanzanian children with sickle cell anaemia
Effect of age, cerebral infarcts, vasculopathy and haemoglobin on cognitive function, in Tanzanian children with sickle cell anaemia
Background: Developmental difficulties in many cognitive domains are common in children with sickle cell anaemia (SCA). Children with stroke are most affected but delayed or atypical cognitive function has been reported in children with SCA and silent infarcts (SCI), vasculopathy, and normal brain MRI. However, very few studies of cognition have been conducted in Africa, a continent with 75% of the SCA burden. We therefore investigated cognitive profiles in Tanzanian children with SCA and examined the impact of age, SCI, vasculopathy, and haemoglobin concentration (Hb). Methods: Children aged 6–16 years with and without SCA were eligible for this cross-sectional study. Cognitive assessment was performed using Raven's Matrices, assessing fluid, non-verbal intelligence and subtests from the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children (WISC-IV), assessing processing speed (PS), perceptual reasoning (PR), and working memory (WM) as these tests are less culture-bound. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and angiography (MRA) were also completed to assess the presence of SCI and vasculopathy. Hb was collected in both SCA children and their non-SCA siblings. Results: Seventy-three children with SCA and 71 healthy siblings (Mean
ages 11.9, SD = 2.8 and 11.1, SD = 2.9 years respectively) were recruited. Compared with healthy siblings, children with SCA had lower PS (Mean
diff 7.35 points; p = .002). Older children had higher performance scores on all tests in relation to their ages. Lowest cognitive scores were observed on the PS subtest, where patients with SCI (SCI+) had lowest mean values as compared to children with no SCI (SCI-) and healthy siblings (i.e., SCI+ < SCI- < healthy siblings, p = .028). On post-hoc analysis the difference was between SCI+ and healthy siblings SCI+ < non-SCA siblings (p = .015); there was no difference between SCI+ and SCI- patient groups. PS was significantly lower in SCA patients with no vasculopathy as compared to healthy siblings. The mean difference from healthy siblings was -8.352 and -0.752 points for VASC- and VASC + respectively (p = .004). There was a significant positive effect of Hb on PSI (p = .001) in both patients and controls and a trend level significant positive effect of Hb on PR (p = .050) and WM (p = .051). Conclusion: In this Tanzanian study, cognitive performance was reduced in children with SCA with or without SCI on MRI or vasculopathy. Cognitive performance improved with increasing age. Lower Hb was associated with lower cognitive performance in both patients with SCA and their non-SCA siblings. SCI and vasculopathy do not appear to have an impact on cognitive function.
MRI, Processing speed, Sickle cell anemia, Silent cerebral infarction, Vasculopathy
105-113
Jacob, Mboka
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Stotesbury, Hanne
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Kija, Edward
d38d0994-353f-4fd2-a5e0-5c102ba89a37
Saunders, Dawn
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Mtei, Rachel J.
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Tutuba, Hilda
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Masanu, Upendo
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Kilonzo, Mrema
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Kazema, Ramadhan
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Hood, Anna M.
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Kirkham, Fenella
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Dimitriou, Dagmara
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Makani, Julie
76a145a7-02fc-43ea-a1df-3a52d2004e48
March 2022
Jacob, Mboka
21ec01f2-e57b-487c-b282-a93e57e59078
Stotesbury, Hanne
1104423d-f215-4585-bb50-29b7fdd6c518
Kija, Edward
d38d0994-353f-4fd2-a5e0-5c102ba89a37
Saunders, Dawn
21dab713-1e6a-486f-8bfa-eea35b382b02
Mtei, Rachel J.
70212512-9ea7-4faa-9253-b71dde903d32
Tutuba, Hilda
f57728b3-55e1-4791-bbd3-a0985d43da21
Masanu, Upendo
a78a8996-b752-40a2-8aa1-e70aeb1c293a
Kilonzo, Mrema
dd6a0c7a-5175-4ae4-9e36-3b6d292073fc
Kazema, Ramadhan
68a9f65f-6898-4d2f-8412-198b36a52d64
Hood, Anna M.
aec0f143-3f19-4a0e-b13c-92ecfd3363a5
Kirkham, Fenella
1dfbc0d5-aebe-4439-9fb2-dac6503bcd58
Dimitriou, Dagmara
3b510b78-4c3d-49d9-8960-84450c33c5c9
Makani, Julie
76a145a7-02fc-43ea-a1df-3a52d2004e48
Jacob, Mboka, Stotesbury, Hanne, Kija, Edward, Saunders, Dawn, Mtei, Rachel J., Tutuba, Hilda, Masanu, Upendo, Kilonzo, Mrema, Kazema, Ramadhan, Hood, Anna M., Kirkham, Fenella, Dimitriou, Dagmara and Makani, Julie
(2022)
Effect of age, cerebral infarcts, vasculopathy and haemoglobin on cognitive function, in Tanzanian children with sickle cell anaemia.
European Journal of Paediatric Neurology, 37, .
(doi:10.1016/j.ejpn.2022.01.010).
Abstract
Background: Developmental difficulties in many cognitive domains are common in children with sickle cell anaemia (SCA). Children with stroke are most affected but delayed or atypical cognitive function has been reported in children with SCA and silent infarcts (SCI), vasculopathy, and normal brain MRI. However, very few studies of cognition have been conducted in Africa, a continent with 75% of the SCA burden. We therefore investigated cognitive profiles in Tanzanian children with SCA and examined the impact of age, SCI, vasculopathy, and haemoglobin concentration (Hb). Methods: Children aged 6–16 years with and without SCA were eligible for this cross-sectional study. Cognitive assessment was performed using Raven's Matrices, assessing fluid, non-verbal intelligence and subtests from the Wechsler Intelligence Scales for Children (WISC-IV), assessing processing speed (PS), perceptual reasoning (PR), and working memory (WM) as these tests are less culture-bound. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and angiography (MRA) were also completed to assess the presence of SCI and vasculopathy. Hb was collected in both SCA children and their non-SCA siblings. Results: Seventy-three children with SCA and 71 healthy siblings (Mean
ages 11.9, SD = 2.8 and 11.1, SD = 2.9 years respectively) were recruited. Compared with healthy siblings, children with SCA had lower PS (Mean
diff 7.35 points; p = .002). Older children had higher performance scores on all tests in relation to their ages. Lowest cognitive scores were observed on the PS subtest, where patients with SCI (SCI+) had lowest mean values as compared to children with no SCI (SCI-) and healthy siblings (i.e., SCI+ < SCI- < healthy siblings, p = .028). On post-hoc analysis the difference was between SCI+ and healthy siblings SCI+ < non-SCA siblings (p = .015); there was no difference between SCI+ and SCI- patient groups. PS was significantly lower in SCA patients with no vasculopathy as compared to healthy siblings. The mean difference from healthy siblings was -8.352 and -0.752 points for VASC- and VASC + respectively (p = .004). There was a significant positive effect of Hb on PSI (p = .001) in both patients and controls and a trend level significant positive effect of Hb on PR (p = .050) and WM (p = .051). Conclusion: In this Tanzanian study, cognitive performance was reduced in children with SCA with or without SCI on MRI or vasculopathy. Cognitive performance improved with increasing age. Lower Hb was associated with lower cognitive performance in both patients with SCA and their non-SCA siblings. SCI and vasculopathy do not appear to have an impact on cognitive function.
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Accepted/In Press date: 14 January 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 16 February 2022
Published date: March 2022
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© 2022
Keywords:
MRI, Processing speed, Sickle cell anemia, Silent cerebral infarction, Vasculopathy
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Local EPrints ID: 470228
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470228
ISSN: 1090-3798
PURE UUID: a2b7f68d-9d78-4dba-8cd2-5bfc9e068565
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Date deposited: 04 Oct 2022 16:52
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:53
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Contributors
Author:
Mboka Jacob
Author:
Hanne Stotesbury
Author:
Edward Kija
Author:
Dawn Saunders
Author:
Rachel J. Mtei
Author:
Hilda Tutuba
Author:
Upendo Masanu
Author:
Mrema Kilonzo
Author:
Ramadhan Kazema
Author:
Anna M. Hood
Author:
Dagmara Dimitriou
Author:
Julie Makani
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