We have studied serum immunoreactive erythopoietin (SIE) levels in 28 patients wih sickle cell anemia (SCA) without renal insufficiency and in 17 patients with nonhemoglobinopathy anemias of comparable severity using a sensitive radioimmunoassay procedure. An exponential relationship between SIE level and degree of anemia was noted in all patients. However, in nonhemoglobinopathy anemia, a sharp rise in the SIE level occurred as hemoglobin (Hb) levels fell below about 12 g/dL, whereas in sickle cell patients the increase was not marked until hemoglobin fell to about 9 g/dL. The response was more blunted in older SCA patients than in younger ones. A linear regression model relating SIE level to Hb level, presence/absence of SCA, and age explained 63% of the variation in SIE. We conclude that the serum erythropoietin levels in SCA increased at a lower hemoglobin concentration and are of a lower magnitude than that of the other anemias.
CITATION STYLE
Sherwood, J. B., Goldwasser, E., & Chilcote, R. (1986). Sicle cell anemia patients have low erythropoietin levels for their degree anemia. Blood, 67(1), 46–49. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood.v67.1.46.46
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