Andy, Manal,
I will add to my list of questions:
1) pros and cons of switching on fetal hg as an alternative to transfusions, can fetal hg deliver sufficient hg to ensure growth because
fetal hg has a higher affinity for oxygen and is therefore less likely to release it.
2) do techniques that switch on gamma genes to produce fetal hg tend to switch on unwanted genes as well.
I will add to this conversation that Dr. Vichinsky had told us that it is preferable in our case to at least attempt to switch on fetal hg. He also mentioned that there were techniques that he has been investigating that may be quite promising in this regard. He told us of a case in which a young boy had strong reactions to blood and was therefore un transfuseable. In this case Dr. Vichinsky, with the help of fetal hg inducers was able to have him produce his own blood.
I wonder if in these specific cases (where antibodies are involved) fetal hg is preferred over possible transfusion reactions or the hemolytic anemia that little A was experiencing. Perhaps, if fetal hg is less efficient, he felt that in certain cases this con may outweigh the complications of transfusions and iron overload. I am speculating at this time - but I will try to get some answers during our visit.
Sharmin