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Leg ulcer induced by hydroxycarbamide in sickle cell disease: What is the therapeutic impact?
Author(s) -
Soya Esaie,
Makowski Caroline,
Blaise Sophie
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international wound journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.867
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1742-481X
pISSN - 1742-4801
DOI - 10.1111/iwj.13115
Subject(s) - medicine , hydroxycarbamide , vaso occlusive crisis , disease , complication , haemolysis , acute chest syndrome , culprit , budd–chiari syndrome , polycythemia vera , intensive care medicine , surgery , sickle cell anemia , immunology , myocardial infarction , inferior vena cava
Major sickle cell disease syndrome (SCD) is a set of potentially serious and disabling constitutional haemoglobin pathologies characterised by chronic haemolysis and vaso‐occlusion phenomena. If expression takes the form of acute vaso‐occlusive crisis, SCD is currently considered to be a chronic systemic pathology, primarily associated with vasculopathy and ischaemia‐reperfusion phenomena. The haemolytic aspect of the disease may be associated with endothelial dysfunctional complications, including leg ulcers, which are a classic spontaneous complication of major SCD. Their frequency, all aetiologies combined, varies considerably according to the series under consideration. Hydroxycarbamide has become the standard treatment for some SCD phenotypes, but has classically been described as one of the causes of leg ulcer. This causality is widely debated and is still difficult to establish because it is a specific complication of the disease. Comorbidity factors (eg, iron deficiency) are also often implicated as causal or aggravating factors so research into all the potential aetiologies of leg ulcers in a sickle cell patient must be exhaustive. We discuss the aetiologies of a leg ulcer in a patient treated by hydrocarbamide for major SCD. The imputation of the drug was established, followed by a marrow allograft in this patient.

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