Haematology in Africa

All diseases result from our genes and from the environment. This is conventional teaching for first year medical students: and if the medical school is in Africa it is hard to find a better example than blood diseases, given that in Africa, on one hand, haemoglobinopathies affect millions of people (WHO Working Group, 1982), while on the other hand, malaria, hookworm and nutritional deficiency (folate, or iron or both) are the main causes of anaemia (Boele van Hensbroek et al, 2010). In medical school we must also deal with the role of Darwinian selection in evolution. This is a central thread throughout biology, and almost everyone agrees it applies extensively also to the human species: yet, when it comes to giving an example, whether the class is held in Africa or elsewhere, the teacher will fall back on how the haemoglobin S gene has been selected in tropical areas through the relative resistance it confers to heterozygotes against Plasmodium falciparum (see Fig 1 and Luzzatto, 1979).

world: only a little more complicated, for two reasons. (i) Tropical diseases are not in lieu, but in addition to those that prevail in temperate climates. It has long been the practice anywhere within the rain forest belt that, when a newly admitted patient has a high fever the question is not whether he needs treatment for malaria, but whether the fever is due 'just' to malaria (Esan, 1975) or to other additional factors. Example of co-morbidity we remember include a patient who had HbSC disease and chronic myeloid leukaemia (see also (Rosner & Grünwald, 1989); patients who had both tuberculosis and lymphoma (see Omoti et al, 2009); a patient with sickle cell anaemia who was at risk of dying from malaria (see McAuley et al, 2010); a young woman with anaemia in pregnancy who was found to have paroxysmal haemoglobinuria and developed fulminating amoebiasis (Oni et al, 1970). In the Northern part of the world co-morbidity is quoted often as a troublesome component common in oncological practice in the elderly; in Africa co-morbidity can be the rule rather than the exception at any age. (ii) Many patients need haematological attention for problems that may have a precise aetiology, but that have in fact developed essentially as a result of socio-economic reasons, as has also happened abundantly elsewhere. For instance, hookworm anaemia is a specific diagnosis: but when Italian workers digging the Gotthard tunnel in the late 19th century became paler and paler until they died it was called miners' anaemia or tunnel disease. Once Camillo Bozzolo, Edoardo Perroncito, and Luigi Pagliani correctly surmised that the spread of the disease had something to do with the workers wearing worn-out shoes and being forced to defecate inside the 15 km tunnel, the problem was quickly solved (Parona, 1894). Today in Africa the same condition, hookworm anaemia, could be called the barefoot farmer's anaemia: should it be treated by the administration of mebendazole and iron or would it be better for farmers to have proper footwear? Today in Africa the spectrum of blood diseases is largely similar to that of the rest of the world, but disease presentation may be considerably modified by socioeconomic and cultural factors (see Figs 2 and 3). In practice, this often means late presentation with advanced disease, and in some cases even mutilation, particularly with neoplastic disease. The same factors also influence the rate of patients who discharge themselves or their children against medical advice, and the degree of compliance of patients with treatment protocols and follow up (Diagne et al, 2003): in these respects the role of social workers is paramount and their services ought to be much enhanced. Plasmodium falciparum infection in a girl heterozygous for Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G6PD) deficiency. The blood film was stained by a procedure that causes lysis of G6PD-deficient red cells, producing their ghost-like appearance. As G6PD deficiency heterozygosity is a somatic cell mosaic as a result of X chromosome inactivation it was possible to show by this procedure that P. falciparum parasitized red cells are predominantly G6PD normal (see Luzzatto et al, 1969).
Co-morbidity problems and other complex clinical situations can be solved by clinical acumen sharpened by experience, diligent review of the literature, appropriate interactions with colleagues, and obstinate perseverance. On the other hand, dealing with major public health problems that manifest through a high prevalence of various types of anaemia (see Table I) is a tall order: what then, in this respect, is the role of a haematologist? It would be certainly wrong to say that a haematologist should not be concerned with the matter; but it would be equally wrong to blame haematologists for the death of children with malaria and severe anaemia or of women with acute blood loss from placenta praevia who have not been transfused promptly enough. We do have an obligation to pinpoint these problems, but this has been done in the literature of the past several decades: it will not help if we continue to designate problems as medical when they are, in fact, economic. We must recognize that such problems ought to be resolved by adopting appropriate public health policies, in particular by improvement of the infrastructure; and that ultimately the basis for such decisions is the will or at least the willingness to make political choices.
Nowadays, much of what a haematologist is called upon to do has the onco-prefix, and Africa is no exception. It is pertinent to recall that our understanding of lymphoma owes much to an African disease which, following the painstaking epidemiological studies conducted half a century ago by Dennis Burkitt (Burkitt, 1962), carries his name. It was on biopsy tissue from East Africa and from cell lines grown in Ibadan (Osunkoya & Mottram, 1967) that the t(8;14) translocation was discovered in Burkitt lymphoma. The subsequent identification of IGH (previously IgH) and MYC (previously c-myc) as partner genes that become juxtaposed and dysregulated as a result of this translocation spelled a new paradigm in the mechanism of oncogenesis (Klein, 1983). Today, accurate diagnosis of most types of lymphoma and of acute leukaemia can be done in most haematology departments in Africa; however, with a few exceptions, this is followed all too often by the frustrating feeling that one cannot provide optimal treatment: sometimes because of limited access to the necessary drugs, sometimes because of inadequate facilities (e.g. for bone marrow transplantation), sometimes both. However, complaining about shortages will not get us anywhere; rather, it would be probably ideal if each department worked out, for internal consumption, a list in three sections (see Table II): (A) Conditions we can deal with adequately. (B) Conditions for which we offer treatment that may not be optimal in 2011, but is nevertheless of proven efficacy. In this respect, treatment approaches using less intense and less costly multi-agent chemotherapy are sometimes successfully introduced with encouraging results (Fasola et al, 2002;Hesseling et al, 2008) (C) Conditions for which we cannot offer adequate treatment; these cases, i.e., those who can afford it and especially potentially curable patients, must be recommended to attend elsewhere for treatment. Clearly the contents of the three sections will vary from place to place: but it would be an advantage for both doctors and patients to have taken the deliberate step of setting and stating in advance a policy to which one can refer, even though it is hoped that adjustments will be needed frequently. It must be acknowledged that, in many countries, haematology has become sub-specialized to the point of fragmentation, with a haematologist who mainly performs transplants being hardly likely to ever see a patient with haemophilia, and with the myeloma expert having nothing to do with blood transfusion. In Africa the general haematologist species is not yet extinct, and contributions in all of these areas have come from general haematologists (e.g. see Essien et al, 1970;Worlledge et al, 1974;Kasili, 1976;Williams, 1985): this means greater demands on one's time in order to keep up to date, but also a command of a wider field, with a combination of clinical and laboratory skills that can be turned to one's advantage. Many haematologists in many parts of the world have also given up looking down the microscope, but not so in Africa where more limited resources must be exploited fully: and fortunately a good microscope does not obsolesce as quickly as a flow cytometry machine. So let us not underestimate how many blood Chronic complications of sickle cell anaemia. (A) Typical ulcer of 5 years duration on the lateral aspect of the right ankle in a 19-yearold male. Upon regular conventional conservative care the ulcer appeared to have healed on two occasions, but unfortunately it broke down again after minor trauma. A skin autograft was then carried out but failed. (B) Atypical ulcer of 3 years duration in the anterior aspect of the right thigh of a 26-year-old woman. The ulcer developed following repeated intramuscular injections of pentazocine, administered as a pain-killer by a nurse and by the patient herself. When selfcare of the wound by dressing became unmanageable the patient saw a specialist and subsequently travelled to India twice for skin grafting, but the procedure failed on both occasions. It is seen that the ulcer in panel B is much deeper than that shown in panel A, reflecting a different pathogenesis. Whereas the ulcer in panel A was a direct complication of sickle cell anaemia, the ulcer in panel B can be regarded as an indirect self-inflicted consequence: painful attacks prompted administration of analgesics, and the patient, who was at the time a University student, opted for self-medication in order to avoid frequent visits to the hospital, thus saving time and money. The patient is still suffering from the consequences of ill-advised inappropriate management, but this ultimately still goes back to her underlying sickle cell anaemia. A significant impact of socio-economic status on the clinical course of sickle cell anaemia has been documented in Nigeria (Okanyi & Akinyanju, 1993). Splenomegaly in Africa: different causes and different treatments. This 9-year-old girl had a massive spleen. A traditional doctor had applied tattoos or scarifications that did not control the condition. A likely diagnosis is hyper-reactive malarial splenomegaly (Bedu-Addo & Bates, 2002), and it is hoped that the condition will respond to prolonged administration of antimalarial drugs (Sagoe, 1970 conditions can be diagnosed or at least suspected just by looking carefully at a blood film; it is possible that, in the future, selected African haematologists will be needed to teach blood morphology in other continents! Against this background, if in a brief commentary we are to single out one disease as the Leitmotiv of African haematology, it must be undoubtedly the haemoglobinopathies, and specifically sickle cell disease. Last year was the centennial anniversary of the description of sickle cells by Herrick (1910). During these one hundred years there have been tremendous advances in understanding the disease, but for the first three quarters of that century there has been remarkably little progress in improving its management. Then, three developments occurred: (i) prenatal diagnosis (Old et al, 2000), (ii) bone marrow transplantation (Vermylen et al, 1994;Walters et al, 1996) and (iii) hydroxycarbamide (HC, previously termed hydroxyurea) (Charache, et al 1995;Zimmerman et al, 2004). For each one of these developments there are pros and cons, including difficult clinical decisions and weighty ethical issues, which are not expanded upon in this article. But, we must ask a simple question: to what extent have these advances been of benefit to patients in Africa, where the large majority (estimated 8 million) of patients with sickle cell disease live? The facilities required for bone marrow transplantation are considerable, but they are certainly present in South Africa (Wood et al, 2009); the facilities required for prenatal diagnosis are relatively modest, especially since this has shifted from haemoglobin-based to DNA-based (Adewole et al, 1999). As for HC, the daily cost of this drug per patient in the UK is about 20 p: unfortunately this cost is higher in Africa, where it is estimated that, in many countries, no more than 1% of patients with sickle cell disease receive HC; and this to us is a shame. Yet, significant background information is available: a search in PubMed for sickle cell disease AND Africa yields no less than 1386 hits, about one-tenth of the total sickle cell disease hits (including, for instance, Konotey-Ahulu, 1974;Bienzle et al, 1975;Akinyanju et al, 2005;Labie & Elion, 2010;Makani et al, 2011). It is true that, although HC is a reversible inhibitor of deoxyribonucleoside diphosphate reductase and not an alkylating agent, questions are still being asked about the possible risk of cancer from this drug: however, there is no theoretical or empirical reason why HC should be less beneficial or less safe for African patients compared to other patients elsewhere (Jones et al, 2010;Svarch et al, 2006;Steinberg et al, 2010).
What is the way forward? Given that little research support is available, should we concentrate more on laboratory experiments, clinical data collection, outcome research or educating the public? As stated at the beginning of this article, we must strike a balance between tackling problems in which haematologists can make a difference and taking on others that are much larger than all haematology departments in the world pooled together. To treat an individual with folate deficiency or with hookworm anaemia is easy and gratifying; but unless poverty is relieved it will be a drop in the ocean, and to relieve poverty we must -regardless of being haematologists -mitigate as citizens or go into politics. When poverty is relieved these diseases will disappear, just like protein-calorie malnutrition in children. The practice of haematology in an African country, like in any other country, is part and parcel of a national structure that depends on a political system: inevitably this has a strong impact on the delivery of optimal haemato-oncology treatments to patients. In Africa, this challenge is initially tied up with the availability of, and access to, the necessary drugs; and it is compounded by the emergence of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as a major threat to blood safety (Lefrère et al, 2011).
In the meantime, we have an obligation to fulfill our specific professional commitments. There is no doubt that international initiatives could help, as indicated by a recent report (Odame, 2010); at the same time, international partnerships could also provide the impetus for research and help to target resources towards the goal of improving patient care. Let us start with a campaign to provide every African who has sickle cell disease with folic acid, antimalarial prophylaxis and, whenever indicated, HC.