Sickle Cell Disease - Initial Management for Family Physicians
Overview
Sickle cell disease (SCD) results from a mutation in the beta globin gene (HbSS genotype). It causes chronic hemolytic anemia and significant multi-organ complications. Sickle cell trait (HbAS) is usually asymptomatic.
All SCD patients should be followed by a Hematologist. The role of the family physician is to initiate education and preventive care while awaiting the referral.
Urgent Symptoms - Educate Patients to Seek Care Immediately
* Fever
* Acute severe pain anywhere in the body
* Chest pain or breathing difficulty
* Neurological symptoms (stroke, TIA)
* Priapism
* Abdominal pain
Families should have a thermometer at home.
Triggers of Vaso-Occlusive Episodes
Educate patients and families to avoid:
* Dehydration
* Cold exposure
* Illness or infection
* Physical or psychological stress
* Surgery (flag to surgical teams)
Infection Prophylaxis
Children with SCD require antimicrobial prophylaxis:
* Age 2 months to 3 years: Penicillin V 125 mg twice daily
* Age 3 to 5 years: Penicillin V 250 mg twice daily
Vaccination
Refer for:
* Pneumococcal: PCV13 and PPV23
* Meningococcal: serogroups B and ACYW-135
* All routine immunizations
Nutrition
* Folic acid 1 mg daily for all SCD patients
* Daily multivitamin WITHOUT iron. Avoid iron unless the patient is clearly iron deficient.
* Monitor calcium and vitamin D; supplement if needed
* Monitor growth at every visit in children
Organ Monitoring (Annually)
* Blood pressure
* Serum creatinine
* Urine microscopy and microalbumin
Ophthalmology
Refer all newly diagnosed SCD patients for a baseline ophthalmologic examination (retinopathy screening). If normal, follow up every 1-2 years.
Calgary Referral
Refer to Hematology through the Alberta Health Services referral pathway. Do not wait for the referral before starting the above preventive measures.
Related Articles
Varicella - Management of Non-Immune Refugee Patients
Management of varicella-non-immune refugee patients, including immunization referral pathways and handling of indeterminate serology results.
Scabies in Refugee Patients
Diagnosis and treatment of scabies in refugee patients, including permethrin application instructions, household contacts, and ivermectin use.
Common Gastrointestinal Parasites in Refugee Patients
Treatment and test-of-cure reference for common GI parasites in refugees, covering helminths and protozoa with first-line dosing for adults and children.