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Mortality in haemophilia patients in India: a national cohort study

Mortality in haemophilia patients in India: a national cohort study
Mortality in haemophilia patients in India: a national cohort study
Introduction: mortality and morbidity in persons with haemophilia (PWH) have decreased due to improved diagnosis and treatment along with comprehensive population outreach efforts, but the impact is not uniform in different countries.

Aim: the study aims to assess all-cause and intracranial haemorrhage (ICH)-specific mortality of PWH in India.

Methods: this is a retrospective, observational, multi-centric cohort study of 1020 haemophilia patients from three centres in India. The mortality data in the family was collected from personal interviews, and subsequently confirmed with the corresponding haemophilia treatment centres (HTCs). The demographic and clinical data, along with other comorbidities, were collected from the medical records.

Results: among 170 reported deaths, 73 (42.9%) were caused by ICH, and 44 (25.9%) resulted from accidents or trauma. Gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding was the third most common cause of death, accounting for 27 cases (15.9%). The average and median ages at death were 27.7 and 26 years, respectively. None of the deceased cases were receiving any prophylactic or immune tolerance induction (ITI) therapy, and all had severe haemophilia. In addition, the prevalence of inhibitors and hypertension was significantly higher in deceased cases compared to that in the general haemophilia population (p < 0.05).

Conclusion: severity of haemophilia, episodic treatment, hypertension and inhibitors showed significant association with mortality. ICH continues to be the leading cause of death among haemophilia patients in the country. This underscores the challenges in managing haemophilia and the need for improved treatment strategies to increase the life expectancy of PWH.
1351-8216
Shetty, Shrimati
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Ross, Cecil
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John, M. Joseph
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Kshirsagar, Shrinath
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Kulkarni, Nimish
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Sarwan, Diksha
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Misha, P.K.
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Paul, Antony
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More, Apurva
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Kaunchale, Nazish
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D'silva, Magdalene
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Masurkar, Shrushti
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Kharat, Shruti
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Patil, Kranti
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Mehendale, Priti
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Sarvaiya, Prachi
feae8e08-2c39-4ed0-9615-39926e9a0585
Rangarajan, Savita
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Shetty, Shrimati
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Ross, Cecil
b209fb14-8962-4a7f-b7f2-99a54b13de34
John, M. Joseph
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Kshirsagar, Shrinath
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Kulkarni, Nimish
bec7960b-5a3b-45c2-95e2-438345a896d5
Sarwan, Diksha
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Misha, P.K.
fbe62885-f179-4442-b6db-1e742250ded4
Paul, Antony
ff85cf16-4cd4-4504-b0ca-b5db95834f43
More, Apurva
505f19b5-2824-4b9e-a43d-f52fdf3053b7
Kaunchale, Nazish
07e739da-0c4d-4c1b-99d1-c0afa651788c
D'silva, Magdalene
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Masurkar, Shrushti
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Kharat, Shruti
f2b3a271-b6dc-487e-9736-6835896f8ac5
Patil, Kranti
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Mehendale, Priti
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Sarvaiya, Prachi
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Rangarajan, Savita
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Shetty, Shrimati, Ross, Cecil, John, M. Joseph, Kshirsagar, Shrinath, Kulkarni, Nimish, Sarwan, Diksha, Misha, P.K., Paul, Antony, More, Apurva, Kaunchale, Nazish, D'silva, Magdalene, Masurkar, Shrushti, Kharat, Shruti, Patil, Kranti, Mehendale, Priti, Sarvaiya, Prachi and Rangarajan, Savita (2024) Mortality in haemophilia patients in India: a national cohort study. Haemophilia. (doi:10.1111/hae.15143).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction: mortality and morbidity in persons with haemophilia (PWH) have decreased due to improved diagnosis and treatment along with comprehensive population outreach efforts, but the impact is not uniform in different countries.

Aim: the study aims to assess all-cause and intracranial haemorrhage (ICH)-specific mortality of PWH in India.

Methods: this is a retrospective, observational, multi-centric cohort study of 1020 haemophilia patients from three centres in India. The mortality data in the family was collected from personal interviews, and subsequently confirmed with the corresponding haemophilia treatment centres (HTCs). The demographic and clinical data, along with other comorbidities, were collected from the medical records.

Results: among 170 reported deaths, 73 (42.9%) were caused by ICH, and 44 (25.9%) resulted from accidents or trauma. Gastrointestinal (GI) bleeding was the third most common cause of death, accounting for 27 cases (15.9%). The average and median ages at death were 27.7 and 26 years, respectively. None of the deceased cases were receiving any prophylactic or immune tolerance induction (ITI) therapy, and all had severe haemophilia. In addition, the prevalence of inhibitors and hypertension was significantly higher in deceased cases compared to that in the general haemophilia population (p < 0.05).

Conclusion: severity of haemophilia, episodic treatment, hypertension and inhibitors showed significant association with mortality. ICH continues to be the leading cause of death among haemophilia patients in the country. This underscores the challenges in managing haemophilia and the need for improved treatment strategies to increase the life expectancy of PWH.

Text
ICH revised 14 Nov 24 without track changes - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 31 December 2025.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 3 December 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 31 December 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 496938
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/496938
ISSN: 1351-8216
PURE UUID: 3049a0e3-293c-4a8a-8489-2e4c6c1fc678
ORCID for Savita Rangarajan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7367-133X

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Date deposited: 08 Jan 2025 15:00
Last modified: 11 Jan 2025 03:00

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Contributors

Author: Shrimati Shetty
Author: Cecil Ross
Author: M. Joseph John
Author: Shrinath Kshirsagar
Author: Nimish Kulkarni
Author: Diksha Sarwan
Author: P.K. Misha
Author: Antony Paul
Author: Apurva More
Author: Nazish Kaunchale
Author: Magdalene D'silva
Author: Shrushti Masurkar
Author: Shruti Kharat
Author: Kranti Patil
Author: Priti Mehendale
Author: Prachi Sarvaiya

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